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Pediatrician

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AVG. SALARY

$189,320

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EDUCATION

First professional degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication -- Solution

This is how you answer your patient's questions:

  1. Why do they call them chicken pox?

    That name goes back a long ways to when people didn't really understand the disease. They thought the marks on your skin looked like chickpeas.

  2. How did I catch them?

    Chances are you came in close contact with someone who was carrying the virus. That's the tiny bug-like organism that causes the illness. You may have shared a cup with that person or simply come close enough in contact to catch the virus through the air.

  3. How long will they last?

    You should feel better in a week to 10 days. The marks should be gone in about two weeks. After that there may be a period of scabbing. Slowly, your skin will return to normal.

  4. When can I go back to school?

    If you're feeling better, you can go back in a week. You'll still have marks on your skin then, but you will no longer be contagious.

  5. Will I die from them?

    It is extremely rare for a young person to die from chicken pox. In most cases, children who die from this illness had other underlying health problems. Since you are a healthy young man, you should be just fine. A little itchy maybe, but otherwise just fine.

Pediatricians have to be able to tell whether their young patient understands their explanations. If the child doesn't get it the first time, a pediatrician will often explain the sickness again till the patient understands it.

"Having good communication skills and having sort of a playful nature to you, I think is a nice quality to have in a pediatrician," says Dr. Anita Chandra. She's a pediatrician in Chicago.

"It's very hard to gain the confidence of children if you're a rough, stuffy kind of person," says Dr. Chandra. "But if you're a gentle, easily communicative, easy to smile kind of person, you gain the confidence of your patients much more easily. You obviously have to be intelligent and capable to be able to make it through medical school and all that, but to be a pediatrician that children and families want to come and see, you need to have some of those skills as well."


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