The very first position I got after graduating PA school, and relocating for my wife’s residency program, was the first offer I received, which was to work at a women’s prison in Gatesville, TX. I’d been looking for almost six months at that point, and had driven to towns as far as 70 miles away to cold-call practices and drop of resumes. I would have taken anything at that point, as evidenced by the fact that I took work at a women’s prison in Gatesville, TX.
Now honestly, there are quite a few good things I could say about the experience, along the vein of the “every cloud has a silver lining.” 1) My supervising physician was so checked out and incompetent that after two weeks of barely training me, I was left to my own devices and learned to depend upon myself. 2) There were lots of abscesses and ingrown toenails, and so I got incredibly good at minor surgical procedures, and plenty of practice with donning sterile gloves (see 0.01644). 3) I got really good at identifying lice. 4) There’s almost nowhere safer to be on 9/11 than a razor-wire enclosed compound with armed guards in the middle of nowhere.
So that was a fun 6 months – because I got the hell out of there as fast as possible for at least FOUR reasons.
But the fifth, and the most entertaining, reason for leaving, is actually the first thing that happened to me: on my very first day of seeing patients, the last one of the morning, just before lunch, a very nice convicted lady looked me in the eye and said “Doc, you know the crotch of your pants is split wide open, right? We’ve been laughing about it in the waiting room all morning.”
P.S. At lunch, I sewed my pants crotch back together with wound suture (it comes pre-threaded!), and had to work out the rest of the day.