The SQL Learning Curve (and Why it Feels Like Pharmacokinetics)

Learning SQL has reminded me of learning pharmacokinetics for the first time. There’s a language, a structure, and certain rules that you can’t ignore if you want the right outcome.

In the early lessons, I’ve been experimenting with:

  • SELECT and WHERE to filter results (like narrowing down to patients with a specific diagnosis).
  • Sorting data by importance, similar to prioritizing which patients to review first.
  • Joining tables, like connecting a drug’s dose with its corresponding lab values in one view.

Right now, these are just exercises with practice datasets. But in clinical terms, I can see how SQL could someday help me:

  • Flag vancomycin patients without recent trough levels.
  • Identify trends in readmissions related to medication issues.
  • Automate parts of medication reconciliation checks.

It’s early, but this parallel to pharmacokinetics makes SQL less intimidating, and even a bit fun.

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