Feature

Too old to practice medicine?


 

Unlike for many other professions, there is no age limit for practicing medicine. According to international standards, airplane pilots, for example, who are responsible for the safety of many human lives, must retire by the age of 60 if they work alone, or 65 if they have a copilot. In Brazil, however, this age limit does not exist for pilots or physicians.

The only restriction on professional practice within the medical context is the mandatory retirement imposed on medical professors who teach at public (state and federal) universities, starting at the age of 75. Nevertheless, these professionals can continue practicing administrative and research-related activities. After “expulsion,” as this mandatory retirement is often called, professors who stood out or contributed to the institution and science may receive the title of professor emeritus.

In the private sector, age limits are not formally set, but the hiring of middle-aged professionals is limited.

At the Heart Institute of the University of São Paulo (Brazil) School of Medicine Clinical Hospital (InCor/HCFMUSP), one of the world’s largest teaching and research centers for cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, several octogenarian specialists lead studies and teams. One of these is Noedir Stolf, MD, an 82-year-old cardiovascular surgeon who operates almost every day and coordinates studies on transplants, mechanical circulatory support, and aortic surgery. There is also Protásio Lemos da Luz, MD, an 82-year-old clinical cardiologist who guides research on subjects including atherosclerosis, the endothelium, microbiota, and diabetes. The protective effect of wine on atherosclerosis is one of his best-known studies.

No longer working is also not in the cards for Angelita Habr-Gama, MD, who, at 89 years old, is one of the oldest physicians in current practice. With a career spanning more than 7 decades, she is a world reference in coloproctology. She was the first woman to become a surgical resident at the HCFMUSP, where she later founded the coloproctology specialty and created the first residency program for the specialty. In April 2022, Dr. Habr-Gama joined the ranks of the 100 most influential scientists in the world, nominated by researchers at Stanford (Calif.) University, and published in PLOS Biology.

In 2020, she was sedated, intubated, and hospitalized in the intensive care unit of the Oswaldo Cruz German Hospital for 54 days because of a SARS-CoV-2 infection. After her discharge, she went back to work in less than 10 days – and added chess classes to her routine. “To get up and go to work makes me very happy. Work is my greatest hobby. No one has ever heard me complain about my life,” Dr. Habr-Gama told this news organization after having rescheduled the interview twice because of emergency surgeries.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Increasing primary care doctors’ knowledge of IPF could speed up diagnoses, suggests white paper
MDedge Internal Medicine
Britain’s hard lessons from handing elder care over to private equity
MDedge Internal Medicine
Out-of-state telehealth visits could help more patients if restrictions eased: Study
MDedge Internal Medicine
Why private practice will always survive: Seven doctors who left employment tell why
MDedge Internal Medicine
Racial disparities in preventive services use seen among patients with spina bifida or cerebral palsy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Turned away from urgent care – and toward a big ER bill
MDedge Internal Medicine
Physician bias may prevent quality care for patients with disabilities
MDedge Internal Medicine
Temper tantrums, bullying colleagues: How to avert physician misbehavior?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Shortage of family physicians in Canada intensified during pandemic
MDedge Internal Medicine
Newer drugs not cost effective for first-line diabetes therapy
MDedge Internal Medicine