Answered by SecondMedic Expert
Intensivist · Critical Care/ICU
Being an intensive/critical care doctor is a unique and often difficult job. It requires a great deal of skill, knowledge, dedication and compassion to provide the best possible care for your patients.
Intensive/critical care doctors must understand complex medical conditions and treatments quickly in order to best administer treatment plans. They are on call 24 hours a day in case of emergencies or changes in patient condition requiring their expertise. Intensive/critical care doctors need to be able to think quickly while making important decisions that could mean life or death for some patients.
Intensive/critical care doctors must also be emotionally strong enough to handle the intensity of the environment and all its implications — from deaths within minutes of being admitted, desperate family members looking for answers, communicating bad news with grace, navigating complicated ethical dilemmas — these are just some facets an ICU doctor has to confront each day on the job.
Furthermore, intensive/critical care doctors have considerable responsibilities when it comes to paperwork which can include logging relevant clinical notes about patient vital signs or recording not only illnesses but any treatment administered as well as its results—all this done under pressure since most times these documents must be completed immediately during active admissions so that other healthcare professionals can review them at once if necessary.
In summary, being an intensive/critical care doctor is one of the toughest yet most rewarding jobs one can experience due both mentally and physically regarding handling long shifts filled with stressors such as illness severity but also joys when you are able see even small victories over disease occur because you were there every step along side your patient through their recovery journey!