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Showing posts with label Beeper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beeper. Show all posts

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Surgery, What's it like?

Morning round at 6:30 AM, end of shift 6PM if you're not on call, and the next day at 6PM if you're on call (36-hour duty), 6 days a week. What's up?

I've never felt or been so out of time for so long in my life. What's it like? Forget about having the slightest bit of time for anything unexpected like your car breaking down or your grandmother getting sick. These have no place in your loaded schedule and most days you have too little time to make a phone call or even to think about it!

On the floors, busy with more tasks than you can count, armed with a loud beeper that won't shut up or stop interrupting you, paged relentlessly by your numerous superiors and their ridiculous requests that could not come at worst times. You feel the need to be at 5, 6 places at the same time, and soon as the day goes by, like butter spread over too much bread.

You feel disrespected, unappreciated, and you want out. Out of the misery, the stress and humiliation. But somehow you pull through it all and get home almost too tired to get out of your clothes and crash on your undone bed and fall asleep to wake up a few hours later for it to start all over again. "Bring it!" seems like the only attitude to take if you are to have any chance of succeeding.

Here's what you do on the first year of a surgery residency.

First call on all your patients's issues.
Loads of paperwork.
Seeing and preparing all new admissions.
Keeping track on all occurrences and treatments done on patients in real time.
Making sure all the labs ordered on patients are within normal and making corrections as needed.
Handle incompetent nurses and be thankful that there are a few who want to help and actually know what they're doing.
Handle all of your superiors' scut work like ordering labs, getting consent forms signed, and transporting blood units or specimens back and forth between the OR and the pathology lab.
Keep track of everything your students are doing and making sure they don't screw up.
Dealing with obstinate and overconfident hypertalkative students, patients, and colleagues
Catering to every attending's immense ego.
Playing secretary and delivering messages between residents and attendings in the hospital who are just too stupid to talk to each other directly.

The list goes on. And the worst part of it is that you never get any form of recognition when you get all of this done right, but get reprimanded heavily at the slightest delay or bureaucratic mistake you make, to the demise of any shred of motivation you might still have had.

What a rush, what a time hole, making you appreciate your only off day in the week like someone starved for a year would appreciate a Big Mac. Wow.

But you know what? I love it! I love that feeling that no matter what happens this year, or the next, or the one after that, something is being built that seems to be worth all the crap you are forced to take. I have students under my supervision now. Students I have to teach, supervise, and help write progress notes. Students who - mostly - look up to their intern with respect and admiration.
And the single most rewarding feeling you have, that will make all of the above seem like a very small price to pay, is the recognition you get from your patients, who often are very sick people that you can help provide with a better life. And it's amazing just how grateful they can be, not because your attending surgeon just performed life saving surgery on them, but more because you devised a way for the dressing on their colostomy to stop leaking stool, the smell of which requires no description when it comes from s diseased colon, from their abdomen and onto their skin and bed sheets, keeping them awake at night. You do something like that, and you end up getting a disproportionate amount of gratitude, and that patient will smile every time you walk into her room.
This feeling, this gratitude, is worth more to me than the highest awards, from Penrose all the way to Alpha Omega Alpha (some of the most coveted awards), making them seem completely trivial once a sick patient calls you their guardian angel just because something you did helped them get a good night's sleep.
There's no beating that. And this mini surgeon is sticking round for more.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

A Physician's Closest Enemy...

... is actually the patient's lifeline. That brilliant little invention called a Beeper or Pager that's designed and built to keep you alert and reachable,  and without which the phrase "on call" would have no practical meaning whatsoever.
That's all very nice. I mean it's really hard to conceive of a hospital functioning without pagers. Every single attempt at communication would invariably take longer, cost more, and be more burdensome on staff and patients alike. So here's how it should work:

1- Patient need something
2- Patient calls nurse
3- If nurse can handle it, stop here.
4- If nurse can't handle it:
5- Nurse picks up a phone and pages Dr. Fixit
6- Dr. Fixit shows up happily within minutes and sorts things out.

Great stuf right? 6 easy steps towards better patient care! Right? Well, only when it works!

BUT... (hehe) what happens when you mix needy and naggy patients, an incompetent nurse, and a doctor worn out by 14 hours of floor work during the day, and 3 hours of the same after sleeping hours? well things turn out a bit different... like so:

1- Patient needs attention = Patient nags about the lighting in the room
2- Patient calls nurse
3- Incompetent nurse prances in and freezes at such an impossible task as putting the patient to ease
4- Incompetent nurse freaks out, picks up a phone and pages Dr. Wornout at 3 AM
5- Dr. Wornout is bummed that the stupid pager's ringing again but humbly picks up a phone and responds
6- Incompetent nurse tells the story
7- Dr. Wornout cannot believe he's been woken up for such a lame story
8- Dr. Wornout screams and cusses out incompetent nurse
9- Dr. Wornout still might have to come over and talk to the patient or prescribe sedatives across the floor to get some peaceful sleep.

Ah, yes! This is perhaps a more accurate description of many of the calls we get on a night's duty. Thinking about it is funny. It really is! I can remember being paged for the dumbest stuff! And I swear all of these are true stories!

BEEP! 2:00 AM, 10 South: Doctor, doctor! The patient in 1026 refused to wear the face mask that was keeping him alive. He says it's too bulky, and his oxygen saturation went down to 70. But don't worry I called Inhalation Therapy and they convinced him. - "Wow good job, stupid male nurse! Thanks! "

BEEP! 5:00 AM 8 North: Doctor, Doctor! The patient in 823 Just called me and said she just had her period. - "OMG are you really calling me at 5 in the morning for this?! What do you want me to do, bring pads!?! Is this an emergency? Is she hemorrhaging?! - No - Well?!!? - ok thank you Doctor.

BEEP! 12:00 Midnight 9 North: Doctor the patient in 922 is ready for his blood transfusion, if you could bring up that unit? - Ok on my way - I get to the floor - Here's the unit, start the transfusion - Oh but Doctor the patient was taken down for his CT scan. - Is he coming back soon? - We don't know so we can't keep the blood unit here, in case it takes longer than expected; you have to take it back to the blood bank and check it out again when the patient comes back. - !@#%#$^$%&*^%$#!@#$#$@%@# You stupid MORON!!!!!!

BEEP! 1:00 AM 10 South: Doctor? I was wondering why the patient in 1036 is taking Methotrexate? - Ok I'll go along with this, He has scleroderma, to satisfy your hunger for knowledge at this hour of night... - Ooh ok, and Why are you giving him Tazocin? - For his pneumonia honey what's up? - Oooh true but why not Tavanic? and since he has pneumonia, why didn't you order him an incentive spirometer? - Hmm are you really calling me to suggest medical management is incorrect? Can I !@#$ing go back to sleep now?! Promise we'll talk in the morning!

No disrespect to nurses, but please help us out with our crazy duties! There are things you can handle, and things you can't, know which is which!
It's funny remembering all this stuff and I'd like to take a moment to say that not all nurses are like this! I've worked with a few nurses who had excellent judgment, knew how to talk to patients and resolve issues like lighting and air conditioning, but also comforted their patients for a peaceful night's sleep without the need for Lexotanyl! Some admittedly knew more about medicine than I did and they have my full respect and admiration. You make our lives easier.

Cheers to a completed Internal Medicine rotation!