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What is worse is that some people who get weeded out in their journey to becoming a doctor would have been the best ones. It will be a struggle not to abandon your purpose; there will be pressure to conform and it might take everything you have to survive. Find it in yourself to remember every year, every week, and every day why you chose to become a doctor.
That mindset can dramatically change the path you take and the shape of your career. I had the pleasure to interview Dr. Michael Richardson. Richardson is a family medicine physician at One Medical in Boston, Massachusetts. He is also a faculty member at Tufts University School of Medicine and is on the legislative committee and board of directors for the Massachusetts Academy of Family Physicians.
I never grew up wanting to be a doctor, but I did have an interest in health and fitness. I loved being active and playing sports, but I was also worried about my personal health as diabetes and cancer ran in my family.
Staying fit was my way of taking control of my life and I hoped it was enough to stave away any bad hand that my genetics had played me. During my sophomore year of college, I happened to take a class in public health that opened my eyes on multiple social factors, such as race, gender, and income, and how they can impact health on both an individual and community level.
The public health class helped me realize that genetics was not the sole driver of this significant health disparity, but was instead related to access to resources, racial discrimination, and socioeconomic status differences between the two families. After coming to understand these seemingly preventable disparities, I knew I wanted to make a difference. Becoming a doctor, specifically a family physician, was my way of confronting these social determinants of health and making a greater impact in my community.