Kind: captions Language: en and from from the clip we saw you know your your intern ear or your first year there at residency it seemed to be really stressful and overwhelming and you use the term burnt out and it kind of seemed that you know that sort of environment might not be sustainable but you stayed in the environment and continue to care for this underserved population so how have you managed to balance the stress and work with your personal life all of a sudden I sort of became myself again and so I think just not you know having some weekend's free and being able to catch up on your sleep so it brings you back to yourself so I think sleep deprivation and time off really makes a difference actually I do want to say one thing which is that watching yourself on a 10 foot screen makes you want to run to a plastic surgeon right away our dermott AR good dermatologist if anybody knows one let me know well I definitely have more questions but now let's open up the crowd so there's a person up here who would like to ask a question I think a microphone will come around to you sir and what would you say to the Obama administration on how health care should be reformed two small questions chains giving me the option of going first I can't imagine why can you hear me all I actually would think about changing healthcare before healthcare education I think the big issue is what is the health care system the United States look like and if we fix it I think the people who go into it are going to know what they're getting into and I think education will probably be a part of that it's going to have to fit into whatever the world is going to look like I think we desperately need to think of healthcare as a right and not something that some people get and other people don't to me it's appalling actually but there's a lot that's appalling about the world so I don't know whether it's going to get fixed or not anytime soon I'm hopeful about Obama being elected I really hope he can make things happen i would say that when you design a system you get the product that you designed for and we've designed a system where people who have high technology know to anybody you know cuz i know this is technology we all like technology but where you get rewarded for high technology where you get rewarded for invasive procedures where you get rewarded for sort of the shiniest and newest thing and you don't get rewarded for prevention and that's why huh and you know i work in a hospital hospitals have so much power people who are interested and systems that are interested in prevention are really really very very low on the totem pole and i think it's because we designed a system that way so if I were to redesign the system that I hope and i think that Obama has the ears so he he some of the people i actually know from my experience in primary care are very close friends with obama in fact one of his close friends is a guy who i know through my professional work is a physician in chicago and he's really public health minded so I'm hoping that Obama has been learned and swayed by that so you know when it's and I think you see a lot of people are really interested in universal health care and the reason they're interested in universal health care is so that we can have the same sort of expensive health care where a lot of people make a lot of money off of the insurance whereas why don't we just have universal health care where we as the public will benefit and we will put public priorities and part of the reason why I chose to do the film is because I certainly have political views which I were hoping and my sort of view of medicine might help get on the film so you've heard it um what do you think is the function of having the internship and residency structured the way it is with the number of hours and the number of hours and the intensity of the work especially given what you indicated is the degradation of the service I'm just puzzled about why you think it's structured that way so I think that you have to look and I'm not a historian and I don't know if there's a historian in the audience but I think you have to look at the historical roots of internship and residency if they were really were clinical apprenticeships and it was a time when you didn't have you know maybe not have beepers patients were in the hospital for two weeks at a time and it was a very I think a very different pace a very different the technology that the interventions were much fewer and so I think that it might I mean maybe it was more reasonable at a certain time when it started and then as medicine grew over the years i think the structure didn't really keep up with the changes and there's been a lot of attempts to change it and I'm hoping that they will continue to grow but the question is how do you get young doctors to have exposure clinical exposure you need to see a lot of patience to learn and so how do you do that within the structure and have people sleep and I will also say one other thing which is that but jay and i graduated in nineteen ninety one so that was quite a long time ago and things have evolved since then at least at Boston Medical Center you know once a week that every resident gets a day off of course the attendings don't get a day off i just thought i'd say that you know we sort of get the bed and but also there's a lot of more attention to you know night floats and so that you don't have so many hours on end so there has been some attention i think so you're looking at you know sort of one iteration ago in what you see of us so it's not exactly what's happening today you don't have to your guests okay do you agree with what you know we have Nancy Oriole here who's a Dean at Harvard Medical School so I just kind of she's a guest but you know I thought you know she might want to make a comment so thank you very much to both of you for participating and thank both of you for putting this out there for the public to see and Janes right life is better but the transition that you go through the sort of the growth that you have to experience to go from being a pre-med student to being a doctor is well portrayed and that's something that's actually very important for people to understand it's it's not just you know another day in the office and I think you did a very an excellent job and a very sensitive job of the you know showing the transition in a way that makes me proud of you guys so thank you