fostering the humanistic practice of medicine publishing personal accounts of illness and healing encouraging health care advocacy

fostering the humanistic practice of medicine publishing personal accounts of illness and healing encouraging health care advocacy

  1. Home
  2. /
  3. More Voices
  4. /
  5. 2023
  6. /
  7. Pills
  8. /
  9. It’s Just One Pill

It’s Just One Pill

When I was deciding what pediatric subspecialty to pursue, one mentor gave me this advice—think what common condition you wouldn’t mind seeing on a daily basis. As I considered various diagnoses, one stood out—iron-deficiency anemia, the backbone of pediatric primary hematology complaints. Indeed, during my fellowship in pediatric hematology-oncology, I’ve seen a plethora of patients with iron-deficiency anemia. The majority are adolescent females, iron deficient due to myriad causes, most often diet or abnormally heavy menstruation.

After making a diagnosis, I prescribe iron supplementation. “Just one pill—or two—a day,” I say. They come back a month later, often with the same iron and ferritin levels. “Are you taking your pills?” I ask. They shrug and look down. “They hurt my stomach,” they say, ashamed. Their parent berates them: “Why can’t you take one pill!”

In these moments, I have a flashback. I think back to my teenage self, the first time I felt failure. I was 16, the fifth-fastest runner on my varsity cross-country team. I never thought I’d be good at sports, but here I was performing better than I’d thought I could. Gearing up for the season, I had high expectations for myself. But I gradually started feeling more fatigued than normal. My legs felt heavy. They didn’t move when I told them to. I remember running one race that should have been easy, but 10 minutes in I had to drop out. Tears streaming down my face, I told my coach I didn’t know what was wrong but I couldn’t run anymore.

I saw my pediatrician the following week. My hemoglobin was 8, indicating iron-deficiency anemia. As I’ve done for many of my patients, she prescribed ferrous sulfate. “Just one pill twice a day,” she said. I couldn’t do it. I tried, but it hurt my stomach, made me nauseous. My mom yelled at me, “Just take it!” She called my pediatrician, who also berated me: “It’s just one pill!” I couldn’t do it. I went from fifth-fastest to fifth-slowest and finally dropped cross-country. It was demoralizing.

But many years later, facing my teenage patients, I know what it’s like to be in their shoes. Instead of yelling at them, I look into their eyes and ask if they’re taking their pills. I explain that I’m not asking to get them in trouble but to know how I can best help them. Sometimes I tell them my story, to show I have their best interests at heart. I never want them to feel they’ve failed, like I did. Taking one pill can be harder than it looks.

Sunita Sridhar
San Diego, California

Subscribe

Get the latest issue of Pulse delivered to your inbox, free.

Comments

4 thoughts on “It’s Just One Pill”

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related More Voices

More Voices Themes

Scroll to Top

Subscribe to Pulse.

It's free.