5.06.2011
Mile 19314: Chasing the Smoke
HERE...
HOLD IT!
Last week, my surgery partner and I are putting together a presentation for journal club on the Nissen Fundoplication we did earlier in the rotation. It was really cool to have an opportunity to present the case & the operation in front of the surgical nurses / assistants of the hospital. A really rad case the Nissen was, but I've been learning over the last few weeks that even the basic of the basic surgeries (I would assume that a surgeon would call them "easy cases") would teach someone going into primary care some of the easiest tricks up the sleeve for being a team player in the operating room.
I had written in one of my blog entries in Dominica, about the excellent communication I saw between nurses and the attending doctors. It's just awesome to see the voiceless transactions that occur here in the operating room at the hospital. But with the opportunity to scrub in with several surgeons, it's interesting to see how different attendings have different expectations on communication.
For some, they're pretty vocal. One of the surgeons I work with during Lapascopic procedures communicates well, and I kinda plug in extra judgment with my experience with him to get the camera angle right for him to use the "Bovie" with precision. (It's so weird, because you're acting as someone else's eyes). Some are a little less vocal, using one to three words to describe how to assist, such as the command that started this blog entry, "Here, Hold it!" Another one of the surgeons is a lot more silent, but with more experience with him, I'm able to figure out if he really wants me to chase the smoke or drain out the blood. And somehow, we get it to work.
In addition to learning more on how communication can go about in the operating room, I'll have to say that I'm happy that I was able to pull off my first suture in the OR... actually 2 small ones. We have an awesome set of nurses, attendings, and surgical assistants, and it's great to have an excellent support group (which I wasn't expecting in the first place from such a stressful environment in the OR). Also, as of this week, I'm learning how to throw in IVs... a couple of us get together around a table and basically spend the time to practice on ourselves, before going out in the "real world" and practicing on the patients. I'll admit, that it is touching to see that all of us are willing to risk potential hematomas or blown veins for each other's learning benefit.
This week, I started Orthopedic Clinic which I'll be doing for the next four weeks, and I'll update more on that in the next entry.
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