In mid-November, Dr. Nichols treated an older man who arrived by ambulance struggling to breath. He and his colleagues noticed the man had several Nazi tattoos while they were switching him into a hospital gown, Dr. Nichols wrote in a Nov. 30 Twitter thread.
Dr. Nichols, who is Jewish, said he’s encountered offensive tattoos or racist patients before. While every encounter leaves him a bit shaken, he is usually able to maintain his empathy and perform his duties using a mantra to remind himself that he’s a physician who’s responsible for saving lives no matter who the person is, Dr. Nichols said.
“For the first time, I recognize that I hesitated, ambivalent,” Dr. Nichols wrote of the most recent patient encounter. “The pandemic has worn on me, and my mantra isn’t having the same impact in the moment. All this time soldiering on against the headwinds, gladiators in the pit. And I realize that maybe I’m not OK.”
Dr. Nichol’s story has since gone viral on Twitter, with more than 34,000 users sharing his post.
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