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A Doctor in the Family

We often assume that having a physician in the family makes illness easier to face. Experience teaches a more complicated reality — that medical knowledge can guide decisions, but it does not separate a doctor from the fears and responsibilities of being family.

I believe having a physician in the family offers some distinct advantages.

The most obvious one is access. Medical information, advice, prescriptions when appropriate, and connections within the healthcare system become easier to obtain. With a physician relative, navigating the maze of a complex healthcare system becomes a little more bearable for the average patient.

But these advantages come with their own complications.

Family dynamics can interfere with a physician’s ability to remain objective. This is why many doctors choose to entrust the treatment of their own family members to colleagues. In these situations, the physician in the family often assumes a different role — not as the primary doctor, but as a healthcare facilitator.

The physician becomes the person who helps navigate the system, coordinates care, explains procedures, and translates medical information into something understandable for everyone else.

In bureaucratic terms, maybe we become a kind of “fixer.”

Not exactly the most flattering title for someone with several letters after their name, but in many ways, that is what we do when someone we love gets sick.

Some physicians still choose to manage their own family members despite the potential bias. It is possible, but it is never easy. Sometimes it takes a personal toll.

I squirm at the sight of my mother being stung by needles. If she winces in pain, I wince too. I feel terrible whenever she complains about swallowing several pills, even when I know those medications are necessary.

When she asks me, “Are you going to cut me again?” my heart melts.

In those moments, I hate being the doctor in the family.

Nobody likes causing pain to someone they love with the promise that it will eventually help them get better.

Is it easier, then, for physicians to manage a sick family member?

No. It isn’t.

I do not find conversations about illness within the family any less painful. Simplifying medical information is challenging. Even when aiming for shared decision-making, you often end up carrying much of the responsibility because everyone sees you as the one who understands the situation best.

And sometimes, not making a decision is also a decision.

There is an unavoidable reality that families with doctors are not exempt from the same problems every other family faces. The cost of healthcare, the complexity of the system, family expectations, fear, and uncertainty do not disappear simply because someone owns a stethoscope.

The hardest part may be carrying the responsibility when medical knowledge reaches its limits.

I have rarely met physicians who proudly claim they “healed” their own family members. But I have met doctors who quietly carry the burden of wondering if they could have done more.

So is having a physician in the family truly an advantage?

As both a physician and a son, I am not always sure.

Let me hear what you think.

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