Published
I find I do this more when reading or studying about a particular disease. When you are actually working with many patients in a job you won't have time to reflect on your having these diseases, just helping each of your patients. I don't think it ever goes away completely but it sure does not rule your life unless you let it. If you have always been healthy, when this kind of thinking starts stop and remind yourself that you have always been healthy and didn't worry about this or that disorder until you began reading about it. Remind yourself that healthy is your norm.
This is so funny! I am having the best time reading this stuff because I can so relate. When I was in nursing school, many years ago, psych was the worst! I would be driving home from clinical trying to make sure I was not hearing voices! Also, I had everyone in my family diagnosed with some sort of psych d/o. Now, anytime I have a patient and they tell me some sort of symptom they have and it is something that I have experienced recently I think I could have the same thing they are in the hospital for! Then there is my poor teenagers. Whenever I come home from work and start telling them about something they should never do, because we get a 16 yo MVC or something, they ask, "OK mom, what kind of patient did you get at work today???".
nebrgirl
133 Posts
prior to starting nursing school, I was pretty darn healthy. And I'm sure I still am, but I'm suffering from that psychological problem with thinking I have all kinds of diseases since I started school....I've thought I've had gout, ovarian cancer, uterine cancer, COPD, body lice, heart problems, lyme disease, (just to name a few). I'm sure this comes from spending entirely to much time thinking about "what's this a sign off...." evertime I have a brief ache or pain, spot or itch. I understand this is a common occurance for nursing students....but when will I get over it? Really it would be comical if I didn't waste time worrying about it.