9.30.2011

Mile 24417 + 1204: Shortie: The Final Leg

Above: Oddly found a four-leaf clover in front of the cath lab this month.

I MIGHT HAVE TO BRING
THE WHOLE HOSPITAL WITH ME.

That's what I said when everyone reacted with interest when I mentioned that I was heading south, with fall right behind me.

I'm about to head off to bed, but I just wanted to log that we're 1204 miles in. Tomorrow begins the trip to St. Petersburg, Florida, where my final rotations in Emergency Medicine and Obstetrics & Gynecology will take place. I'm looking forward to it. But first, time to rest, there's 17 hours of traveling ahead. I'll update you on some of my final adventures in Columbus soon, when I get an opportunity to stop on the road.

9.06.2011

Mile 24417 + 847: Pull Up a Chair...

Above: The Cath Lab has a wonderful Digital LED clock emitting the tone, "Pressure."

"IT WAS
SNOWING..."

... was what the patient said to me as I listened to him/her give their story about their current issue in the hospital today. The patient was on the elderly side, but I found it amusing. I played along with it to see where the patient was going with it. However, just to make sure I didn't mislead anyone, I told that patient that it was 70 degrees outside and warmer. Patient's response: "I hope it stays this way."

----

After three weeks of Cardiology (and 847 miles into my second cross-country trip), I'll admit that the group I am working with has me truly enlightened on a huge concept in medicine. It's more than diagnosis and treatment... it's also risk management. Measure the costs and benefits of each treatment and see how that works well for the patient. Mnemonics like CHADS and TIMI sound pretty silly when you're not in the medical world, but to us clinicians, they mean the difference between whether or not we're going to thin someone's blood for possible clots or whether or not a person had a heart attack or not.

On another note, going into primary care and providing excellent bedside manner is something that I am looking forward to doing when I become a doctor. And, I'll say that the last place I expected someone to pull up a chair and have a solid conversation with a patient was on a consult service. However, each one of the doctors I've seen, provided there's an open chair or a ledge around, will sit down to have a face-to-face conversation with the patient.

When I was in Decatur, IL, I remember sitting in front of a news article stating the benefits of sitting down. It makes so much sense though, as it makes the visit much more personable for the patient, and instead of seeming like a commander, it makes the doctor seem like more of a role model or counselor. I think that can go yards to helping a patient feel like he/she can participate more in what is going on, and feel more comfortable with all that is going on around them.

And that also goes for the physical exam. I don't know if I have posted it before, but this article from the New York Times, mentions how Stanford plans to revive the Physical Exam. I've mentioned before how numbers and labs are important, but the context to which they are all interpreted are covered in the history and physical. But there's more to it than that... utilizing the stethoscope and interacting with the patient, seem to give the patients a feeling that the doctor is truly participating in their care. As much as numbers are accurate, numbers can only do so much.

So, next time your doctor takes some time to sit down next to you, it's no longer only in times of bad news, it's always for the best.

9.01.2011

Mile 24318: Call me Erwin

Above: Graham crackers are in ready supply on the surgery floor.

"ERWIN... JOHNNY...
ALMOST."
- My attending on a fellow medical student calling me by the wrong name.

Last year, during my Internal Medicine Rotation, I found myself eating a horrible breakfast a lot of mornings when arriving at the hospital.   However, it was the most easily accessible: potato chips and cups of juice (that in truth were only 10% juice) stared right at me in the resident's lounge.  It was a terrible combination. Well, during my Anesthesia Rotation, I've gotta say that I worked on it. I'm getting more nutritious by keeping my energy levels high through Graham crackers. These wonderfully available packets (above), kept me going through taking patient histories, inserting LMAs, and following through with patients in the post-op room.  Pretty potent for a small packet, I may say.

And here I am, after a full sixteen weeks of Surgery, currently in a 2 week break before hitting the road to Columbus.  As much as I'm not going to go into Surgery, the folks at St. Anthony have really taught me an appreciation for it (with or without the graham crackers).  I'm not going to forget how the masks and scrub uniforms on the nursing staff made people look completely different than when seeing them outside of the hospital.  That perhaps led to my last nickname, Erwin, when a fellow medical student couldn't come up with my name.

Erwin... It works.

However, my last four weeks in anesthesiology were quite interesting.  Originally, my perception of a day in the specialty consisted of placing some tubes and watching the patient as they fall asleep, then waking them up, and you're pretty much done for the day.  I ended up seeing their jobs are much more important then orignally thought, making me appreciate the rotation much more.  If you think about it, just a couple ounces of anesthesia, if placed into the wrong part of the body or if dosed wrongly could put the patient in danger.

I've talked about the "art of medicine" before from my perspective, as much more of a clinical thinking concept, but the "art of medicine" in Anesthesia I saw was one of procedure.  Many of the procedures, such as spinal or nerve blocks, or even the classic intubation require a lot of muscle memory and hours of practice.  Everything they do needs to be accurate and precise, or a lot of wrong could happen.  But it doesn't.  The doctors and nurses in the anesthesia department at St. Anthony were pros at their jobs.

And with that, I'm entering back into the realm of medicine, and taking a Cardiology elective at Grant Medical Center in Columbus, OH.  This is the start of the last big road trip I will make during my medical school career, and the start of the last three rotations ever.  My journey through medical school has been amazing so far, it can only get better toward the end.