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THE WONDERS
   OF RETIREMENT

No regrets about decision
to retire

  By Richard Thorner, MD

     After several years of considering the oft-
  asked question, “When are you going to re-
  tire?” and finally becoming comfortable
  with the concept, last summer I decided
  that October 2014, just before a long-
  planned, three-week trip to South Africa,
  would be the beginning of the next stage in
  my life’s journey.

     I was about to turn 67 and though when
  30 I expected to retire at the ripe old age
  of 60, it didn’t feel right at that time. I have
  been lucky to remain in good health and
  always thought I walked through the hos-
  pital with the same brisk step and confi-
  dent outlook I had as a senior resident. I
  do not know how the newer MDs (who
  are younger than my kids!) see me — as I
  see myself or as an “old physician” from
  another era?

     I took one week of vacation the first year
  I was in practice, but now I was taking more
  and more time off (I counted nine planned
  weeks in 2014 plus long weekends as they
  might occur) but never left without feeling
  uneasy about what might happen to my pa-
  tients in my absence. I was also becoming
  more aware of the daily emotional toll we
  accept as “part of the job.” I think most of
  us downplay how different a clinician’s emo-
  tional burden is from that which any other
  professional is asked to assume. Those
  stresses, handled by some better than others,
  have unfortunately contributed to the dis-
  ruption of many of our colleague’s profes-
  sional and personal lives.

     In addition, I was less than enamored of
  the hospitals’ use of EHR (let alone the

22 San Antonio Medicine • September 2015
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