Showing posts with label residency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label residency. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 02, 2013

Auld Lang Syne

“Beware the Ides of March.”
 – Soothsayer, Julius Caesar, William Shakespeare
 La Morte di Cesare by Vincenzo Camuccini

“Beware the first of July.” – Everyone associated with academic medicine. Ever.

While most of America recognizes January 1 as the star of the new year, for those in the world of academic medicine, where we train medical students, interns, residents and fellows for their careers as physicians, it is truly July 1 that is seen as the entre to the future.

Every physician has experienced July 1 as a trainee and my guess is that every time the date looms ahead on the calendar, it makes many of us pause and reflect on our own July Firsts. At least, I do.
Each year my remembrance of the first day I walked into a hospital and introduced myself as “Doctor” makes me a little more squeamish, a little more amused, a little more frightened, and from my vantage point as a young** attending, I sigh and shake my head at that young physician who had no idea what would be ahead of her.

July 1 of my intern year was a Saturday. While most industries would think that starting a whole new crop of employees in their new roles on a weekend would be ludicrous, in medicine it matters not on what day of the week July 1 lands. It will be the first day in practice. Deal with it.

That Saturday, I walked into the local VA Hospital, my stomach full of butterflies, my long white coat feeling like a costume, my pockets full of pens and notecards and pocket guides, and my inner voice on a constant loop of “What. The. $%*&.” I was doing my first month in the medical ICU of that VA, working with another intern, a brand new second year resident, and a seasoned attending. From the outside you ask, “how bad does it suck to be on the ICU, where you have the sickest of patients, your very FIRST month of internship?” It does suck. It sucks bad because it is terrifying, but apparently it is some kind of screwed up compliment from the program. They say the only put the “best,” the “most capable” in the ICUs in July. Though I have no idea what scoring tool or measuring system they are using to gauge this, so I think it’s probably just what they tell people to calm them down a bit before they are made the sacrificial offering.

Most of that day, frankly, is a blur. It was composed of getting used to an electronic medical record system, not getting lost to or from the bathroom, trying to remember which of the patients in the ICU were mine and which were to be followed by the other intern, translating the dear attending’s accent and medical-ese into something that made sense in my brain, and constantly trying not to freak out. I survived it, though, and so did my patients – at least in my memory they all were still alive the next day.
Being a new intern is like being a new parent.
You are constantly scared and tired and scared.
Look how terrifying that baby is!

And it was the next day that would test my mettle as a newbie physician. For, on July 2 and 3, I was to be on call. For 30 hours (give or take, but let’s go with 30 for the sake of what the rules limited us to at that time). I came to the hospital around 6am on Sunday morning, carrying a backpack full of food to get me through the next 30 hours (the VA was not in a good neighborhood for take-out and the only food items available were from the vending machine), a few toiletries, some caffeinated beverages, and probably a book I thought I might get a chance to read.
My team made rounds through the morning and early afternoon. My co-intern and I did our notes while our senior resident stayed near us and answered questions about how to place orders, delete notes we started on the wrong patient, find lab results – all of which she had shown us the day before, but had not quite stuck.

Then it happened. The other interns, who were not on call, started paging me and wanting to give me checkout on their patients.  It was time. My call coverage was starting. The other interns flocked to me, armed with their printed off patient lists that seemed to be hundreds of pages long, rattling off the demographics, the diagnoses, the problems to watch out for, the labs to follow, the plans in case of disaster. After hearing “Mr. Jones is a 72 year old guy who came in with COPD and chest pain and is on {fill in antibiotics} and {add in ant-hypertensives} and has labs at 8 o’clock tonight…” and “Mr. Johnson is a 67 year old guy with CHF and shortness of breath who came in for a COPD exacerbation versus CHF and is on {fill in diuretics} and {fill in breathing treatments} and has labs at 7:30 tonight…” and “Mr. James is a 76 year old guy with COPD and CHF who came in with nausea and diarrhea and is …” over and over again (say, 50 times because that’s how many patients you are going to be in charge of tonight), these wonderful vets become a big old medical soup of CHF, COPD, CAP, C diff, AMI, AMS, VRE that has no chance of being able to distinguish one clearly from another.

I suspect I almost cried. Or at least had some “stomach issues.”

For a couple more hours, though, my co-intern and my senior were still close by, since we had a lot to get finished before they could go home. The scariest moment, though, was when that dear, sweet, lovely, patient senior resident picked up her backpack and told me “See you tomorrow. Good luck!”

I felt abandoned. Vulnerable. Inadequate. Like I had been kicked in the stomach and then dropped at sea.

There was, of course, another senior resident on call with me and another intern that night. It was a senior I knew well. And it was his first night on call as a senior resident. His first time in charge of the interns. His first night running the show and making sure the interns didn’t screw up too badly. And he was well qualified to do this, since just 48 hours prior, he had been an intern. But, from June 30 to July 2 he had been given that mystical power that all interns assume will be granted upon them and was now “the senior.”

The night was, as you may have predicted, horrible.  New admissions. Sick guys**. With blood pressures in the 80s. Admitted to the ICU with guardian angels of ICU nurses there to say things like, “Doctor, you want to order another bolus now, don’t you?” and “Doctor, you’re getting ready to start antibiotics, right?” and “Doctor, which pressor are you thinking of starting now. I’ll go get it from the Pyxis…maybe some dopamine?” Here is where I will say it: nurses kept patients alive that night. Sure my name and my seniors name were on the orders and the notes, but the nurses are the ones who had the experience to see when patients were on the brink of disaster. They are the ones who had the sixth sense about patients preparing to crump. And it didn’t take me long to realize that I needed them desperately.

The flip side to this, is that the nurses know we aren’t to be trusted, and they know they need to initiate the fresh interns. If you are a nurse and you deny this, I will take back the last three sentences in that prior paragraph. I’m giving you all huge credit for keeping patients alive the first week in July. However, you guys know that you get a little thrill out of paging at 2am and asking for orders for a bowel regimen for the patient who “hasn’t pooped in 2 days. Can you order a laxative?” And you all are good at sensing that moment when we have finally gotten all orders in, patients relatively stable, and can steal about 30 minutes for a cat nap. Just as the brain goes fuzzy and sleep sets in, “BEEEEEP BEEEEP BEEEEEEP.” The pager goes off. And the patient who is soundly asleep despite not having pooped since Friday is granted an order for some milk of magnesia…that he will take when he wakes up…in five hours. It usually takes interns until about mid-September to realize the ridiculosity**in this, though.

Back to the night of July 2, and morning of July 3. Around 5:45 the sky begins to lighten. Pagers start going crazy as the nurses preparing to hand over their patients to the day crew request new orders or draw your attention to the labs starting to come in. This is when, as a sleep deprived, stressed, and hungry intern (seriously, those 5 granola bars and the PB&J I packed were NOT enough food) I began to get a little snippy despite my best efforts.

Then I had to go through the process of handing back over the patients to the bright eyed, well rested, clean smelling, breakfasted group of interns coming back in for the day. And those interns were probably asking really annoying questions like “what was the K last night?” and “how many doses of Tylenol did he use?” and I probably felt really guilty inside for not knowing those answers, but at the same time, probably thought to myself, “DUDE! I had 50(!!!) patients under my watch last night. I don’t know all this shit! Look it up yourself!” and “Just wait, my friend, you have no idea what you are in for when you have your first call.” But I got the patients back under the care of their primary team intern, and then started to pre-round on my own ICU patients and then rounded with my ICU team.

Up to that point in my life, I never knew what it was like to have been awake for 27 hours. And it isn’t just the physical strain of being awake that long. It’s the emotional and mental strain as well. It’s the kind of strain that causes atypically articulate, quick-witted person to not be able to find the right term and instead fumble around saying, “we got results of that test. The one that tells about the number of cells…in the blood…like the red ones and the white ones and the platelets…” Until the attending looks with confusion and says, “Do you mean a CBC?!?”

“Uh, yes, I meant a CBC…”

Then, a few hours later, after rounds are finished and notes are in and it’s finally time to go home “post call,” that physical, mental, emotional fatigue is what made me collapse into a puddle of tears as I turned on my car. That’s the thing about me. I know I’m exhausted when I start crying. I had called my husband to let him know I was on my way home, and when I heard his voice, I started bawling. All of the fear and anxiety and worry and self-doubt came out right then.

“What the hell have I gotten myself into?”

“How am I qualified to take care of people?”

“When am I going to know what I’m supposed to do if…”

“How am I going to drive all the way home like this?”

It was a mash up of emotion all the way home. When I got home, I was greeted by my sweet dog and my husband, who had some food for me and let me cry some more on the couch. I told him, “this isn’t right. This isn’t how people should be treated.”  I lamented the state of residency training for a few minutes before I crashed for the next 17 hours.

Then I woke up, got dressed, and went back for more.

I was in one of the last residency classes (I did a four year med-peds residency) that still had 30 hour shifts. New rules went into effect the year after I graduated residency, and now the maximum shift for an intern is 16 hours. It is a rule change fraught with controversy and new problems – how do you learn as much when you are so much more limited in your exposure to clinical patient care? What do we do with all those extra hand-offs? In ways I envy their limited shifts, but mostly I don’t. In the moment, it was terrible. I left that first 30 hour shift thinking that it was going to be a brutal four years of training and that it was seriously flawed. Yet in hindsight, I know that those 30 hour shifts over those four years were likely among my most educational. They forced me to begin taking charge of patient care, making decisions on my own, interacting with families and answering questions and, yes, getting beaten down at times. Did I make mistakes along the way? I’m sure I did. Did they cause harm to any patients? I truly don’t know. And I can see that side of the argument for restricting work hours and trying to modify resident training, absolutely.

Through the rose colored glasses of hindsight, it is only that first 30 hour shift that stands out for being torture to me. There were other bad shifts, but not like that one. No other that, simply for their existence, brought me to tears. That young intern in my memory is like a child to me, in fact, I see her much as I see my 13 year old self embarking into high school, or my five year old self embarking into kindergarten – so very much to learn about the world and about herself.
This was taken at my 8th grade graduation. Look, it was the very
early 90s and floral prints were all the rage, so stop mocking.
After all "Everyone's a Star!"

It’s probably that perspective of the young intern me that has kept me in academic medicine, now seeing that there will always be learning to do, always be teaching, always be those fresh young minds to try and help shape into excellent, compassionate people and physicians. It gives me a chance to make resolutions, which I no longer do for January 1. Now I do it on July 1: I will teach better and more, I will be more patient with learners, I will set an example for them, etc.

So, to everyone out there, Happy July. May we all embrace our own past, thank the patients, nurses, and physicians from whom we have learned, and may we continue to grow and learn ourselves.


**”young” is a relative term. I am still in my first 5 years as an attending, but am in my mid-30s as a human. Thanks to the wrinkles and dark circles that come as a perk from this job, though, you might mistake me for someone a few years older.

** patients in the VA, at least in the Midwest in the mid ‘00s, were almost all male. Like, we fought over who would get to take the 1 in 1000 female patient who got admitted because she might be more interesting.
** yes, ridiculosity is not a real word. Neither is "ridiculopathy" which is a nerdy word that nerds like me prefer. I would explain it but it would be way, way too nerdy.

Saturday, May 08, 2010

There but for...

Tonight is my (hopefully) last ever 30-hour in-hospital call. It's strange to think that another phase of my training is drawing to a close and that I'm on the brink of being allowed to practice medicine all on my own. The day started off with the usual parade of inpatient tasks: checking in on patients, reviewing lab results and x-rays, rounding with the attending, note writing. It was a calm day. I was in our resident lounge studying, in fact, and had just dozed off on the comfy sofa when my pager went off.
"Of course," I said, maybe just in my head, maybe out loud. I called back the number and that's when things got a little crazy. Sit tight with me for this story, see, I'm still processing what went on and actually thought sitting down to write about it might help me in some way.
So, I returned the call and was made aware that there was a potentially very sick pediatric patient in the emergency room. The call actually came from a nurse in our pediatric ICU, who was checking with me to get more information about a patient they had heard might be getting admitted to the unit. At that point, I actually hadn't heard anything, but told her I'd look into it by calling the ER.
When the clerk answered the phone in the ER and I identified myself as the pediatric resident on call, she laid out a story: a toddler had been brought in by his parents and he had been immediately put in a room and there was a chance he was going to be intubated and possibly coded, and the ER docs thought maybe he had perforated his bowel. She told me he might be going to the operating room, that the surgeons had been notified.
I called back the ICU and gave them the info, then told them I was going to go to the ER myself to see what was happening.
Walking into the 25+ room/bed emergency department, there was no question as to which of the rooms the toddler was in. There was a crowd of people at the door, a flurry of activity coming in and out of the room. I found another resident, who was working in the ER, and she told me a quick story about the patient. By the time I got to his room, he had been intubated and because they had a very difficult time getting IV access on him, they'd had to place IO lines (IO = intraosseous, something we can do for kids where we put a pretty big needle into the bone in the lower leg so we can give vital medications, fluids, etc). An x-ray was being taken to see of the breathing tube was properly positioned, to try and see if there was a problem in the abdominal cavity, and to see if both of his lungs were inflated. The x-ray showed that he'd possibly had one of his lungs collapse, so the ER doctors and surgery resident prepared to place a tube in his chest to evacuate the air. During this time, the boy's heart began to slow down to a rate that requires us to start chest compressions. We were officially in a full blown code blue.
What happened for the next 25 minutes was a demonstration of what physicians and nurses do to work together to save lives. For a few moments every now and then the room would get a little more tense and on edge, but for the most part what I saw happen was a coordinated effort to bring this boy back from the brink, rescue him from death.
Breath was pumped into his lungs, three of us alternated turns to compress his chest to try and pump his heart for him so blood could flow through his body, needles were stuck into his belly, his chest to suck out air that shouldn't be there and might be compressing vital organs, time was watched to let us know when doses of medications could be given, and all the while the boy was motionless on the bed.
At about the midpoint of the efforts the parents were brought into the room. They saw their boy, they saw a room full of doctors and nurses working to save him. They were too upset to stay in the room, and stepped just outside into the hallway, mom sobbing, dad crying.
There was a moment when his heart began beating again. It showed up on the screen, a flicker of activity, a steady rhythm but not the kind that can actually keep someone alive - but just enough that we felt a weak pulse. A shock of electricity was delivered in the hope that it would "reset" the electrical system of the heart so it would beat properly and strongly on its own. For a minute or two, it did, We could take a break from the chest compressions, but several of us had our eyes on that monitor, watching the heart rhythm to make sure it behaved.
Of course, it didn't.
We went back to compressing the chest. More medications were given. More needles placed. I'm sure more prayers or requests for divine intervention were made.
It gets to a point, though, where everyone in the room starts making eye contact with one another. We all begin glancing around, then glancing back up at the clock. In our minds, thinking, "It's been ___ minutes since we started compressions." We start doing the calculations. Start remembering the basic science. "Brain damage sets in after only 3-4 minutes without fresh oxygen." "Chances of meaningful recovery after severe anoxic brain injury are less than 1%." We know. We don't want to know, but we know. We don't want it to be true.
But, it is. It's enough. We've gotten to the point where we say, "this is all we can do."  It's enough. But when it's a child, the words "we've done enough" seem inadequate. When a child was playing happily this morning and suddenly fell sick this afternoon, and now we are looking at his little body in front of us, how can we feel that we've done enough?
Through the past four years of training, I have seen plenty of patients die. I have been a part of several code blue situations. I have stuck needles and tubes in people. I have done chest compressions. I have squeezed oxygen into their lungs. I have seen most of those people ultimately pronounced dead - either pronounced dead for the cessation of the code, or dying hours to days later after having been hooked up to life support following the resuscitation efforts. Some of those codes and ultimately those deaths came expectedly. Death creeping up, closer and closer, all of us doctors knowing the end was near, unable to convince the patient or the family that a code would fail. Then when the page comes "Code Blue, room ___," we look at our pagers and think, "Of course." Some codes are expected because of a person's age. Are we really that surprised when a 96 year old's heart stops beating? Is it that shocking when a patient with cancer affecting every part of their body succumbs to infection or organ failure?
What I've never done, though, is gone through a code on a child and seen that child die.
I've been a part of a small handful of pediatric code blues. Fortunately, they rarely happen. There are the resuscitations we do one our patients in the neonatal ICU, those babies born 4 months early, who come into the world needing us to basically replace what their mother's womb was doing for them. Those still fall into that "not surprising" category, though. Just like it isn't surprising when a 96 year old heart stops, so it isn't surprising when a 25 week preemie's lungs aren't working.
I've seen a couple of toddlers come in with near drownings, but they ended up getting intubated and going home, seemingly unscathed, within a week each - although I have to say at least one of those kids shocked the heck out of me to have done so well.
This boy, though, was an out of the blue, totally unpredictable, tragic story. He was a healthy toddler. He was a little under the weather yesterday, threw up a few times. Was drinking Pedialyte okay today.
Then, mom and dad noticed he didn't look right. Noticed his belly seemed to be "getting bigger and bigger" then his breathing started getting fast and shallow and he stopped acting alert. They were driving to the hospital as fast as they could, carried their little boy in, handed him over to the team in the ER.
The ER doctors and nurses, the pediatricians, the surgeons all convened on the room, on the boy.
Help him.
Fix him.
Save him.
We tried.
In the end, it wasn't enough. When we say, "that's enough," we know it isn't the "enough" that got the job done.  The enough of "let him go." The enough of "now we need to leave this body alone."
It's the enough of mercy.
We decide we have reached that point. We ask the family to come back in, we keep working. We keep watching the monitors, keep squeezing air into his lungs, keep putting medications into his body. Tonight, I was the one to keep compressing his chest to keep the blood flowing.
The parents come in.
The boy is very sick. He was very sick when you brought him here. You did all you could do. we've done everything we can do. The body has been though a lot. We have been doing all we can do for all this time, are still doing all we can do. We recommend that we stop. We are telling you, "your son is dead."
All that time, while the parents were standing in the room, hearing this news, being told their child's fate was decided, I was pushing on that boys chest. I found myself pushing harder, pushing with all my energy, as if I could elicit the right charge from my body to travel down my arms, into my hands, through his chest and into his heart. Start again, This is your last chance, dammit, if you don't start beating again for us now then you're done. Please, start beating, something. Now...please. Hurry. This is it...
I noticed my vigor increasing, became momentarily singularly focused on trying to get that damn heart to beat again. Then I noticed the hands of the other doctor's and nurses slowing down, drawing back from the boy. Stop the medications. Stop bagging in the oxygen.
Stop compressions.
That's it.
A moment ago, we were keeping you alive. Or at least, "alive."
Now you are dead.
He is dead.
Your son is dead.
Slowly the room cleared out. You don't realize how crowded the room was until people start leaving it.
We removed what we could of medical equipment from his body. Wrapped him in blankets, asked mom and dad if they would like to hold their son.
Mom gathered him in her arms, sobbing over him, rocking him. Saying his name, saying "No."
The other pediatricians and I stayed in the room. Funny how suddenly you look around and everyone who had been so committed to working on keeping him alive leave once there is nothing else medically to be done. We gave them space, tried to comfort them.
It wasn't for about five minutes that when mom looked at her boy in her arms, touched her hand to his forehead and said (in Spanish), "I don't believe it. I can't believe it."
I felt the wave hitting me.
I walked as subtly and quickly as I could out of the room.
The whole time I'd been telling myself, "don't think it. Don't think it."
Then I thought it.
This could be Henry.
Same age.
Same size.
Same thick eyelashes.
If this could be Henry, why wasn't it Henry? How was this boy the one unlucky to be taken from his mother? Or more appropriately, how was this mother chosen as the one to lose her son?
Why not me?
These are thoughts that if you start to let your mind run free with will make you crazy. Make you questions everything "right" and "wrong" in the world. Make you unable to ever let your child or anyone else you love out of your sight. Except these parents didn't let their boy out of their sight, he was with them. He just got really really sick really really fast.
I'm not a religious person, but how many times can you hear the phrase, "there but for the grace of God go I" run through your head? Answer: too many.
So many times that the question becomes nonsensical. Becomes too unbelievable, almost comical.
There but for the "grace" of God go I.
There but for the grace of "God" go I.
(I'm not looking for a religious debate or inspiration here, please)

After the other family members, a chaplain, a social worker all arrived to the ER to the side of the parents, we left. I couldn't get Tommy on the phone fast enough.
"Bring me Henry," I told him. I told him briefly what had happened, told him "I need to hug my boy."
They came to the hospital. I pulled Henry from his car seat. squeezed him tight, tighter. Never tight enough.
There but for the grace of God go I.

Getting to this part of the story, where my work and my life become intersecting with one another makes me eyes well up again. Here I have to put up the mental wall. "You can't let yourself think that way."
So, I have to stop here before my mind goes too close to that wall, before I test those waters and see what happens when the Pandora's box is opened.

Squeeze your babies if you have them. If you don't have them yet, squeeze them every day when you do have them. They are the most overwhelming joyous and heartbreaking thing that will every happen  to you. My heart breaks every day with love for Henry, and just when I think it can't break anymore, it does and heals itself a size bigger than it was the day before. It's the scariest most vulnerable kind of love I've ever felt, and knowing it could be taken away, like that - just like that- is too much for me to even keep thinking about right now.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Six months down

Yesterday when I walked out of the hospital I offically concluded my first six months of my intern year.
More importantly, I concluded this year's stint with internal medicine. Next week when I go back to work, I will be starting pediatrics, where I will be for the last six months of my intern year.
Doing combined internal medicine and pediatrics means I am going to be living a kind of double life during my training, alternating back and forth between the world of adult medicine and kiddo medicine. This year was split six months of each, and the next three years will have me switching every four months.

Do I have reflections on the first six months?
Here is a tally:

Number of times I got pulled over in the VA Hospital parking lot: 1
Number of times I was accused of "evading police" by not pulling over quickly enough in the VA parking lot: 1
Number of patients I see regularly in my clinic who weigh over 350 pounds: 5
Number of them interested in losing weight: 0
Number of patients I have seen who weight over 650 pounds: 1
Number of people I have pronounced dead: 4
Number of "code blues" I have gone running down stairs and hallways to get to: 7
Number of "code blues" that were called when someone accidentally hit the "code blue alarm": 6
Number of times I have cried in relation to work: 9
Number of times I have laughed in relation to work: too many to count
Number of times I have thought, "I can't believe I get to do this:" roughly 182
Number of times I have been asked by a 3-year old "Are your a doctor or a veterinarian?": 1

Oh, and here is a story about the highlight of my Christmas celebration with Tommy's family.
Our 6 year old niece was telling me about losing her teeth and how she gets a dollar from the too th fairy when she loses a tooth. His 10 year old nephew then asked me how much money I got from the tooth fairy when I was a kid. I told him "A dollar." He looked at me, and with no malicious or smart ass intent, said, "Wow. That was a lot of money back then wasn't it."

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Call version 2.0

So, the first piece I tried to write never really got off the ground and never really got finished. I have really wanted to make myself do a better job of recording my experiences and feelings as I go through this year, but haven't had the discipline to actually do it.
Here I am on my second overnight call. The fact that it has been two weeks since my first overnight call is something amazing. Most interns like me would be having overnight calls every 4th or 5th night for 11 months of this 12 month year.
My program, though, is doing something different this year for the first time ever...no weekday call for interns.
Instead, they have a "night float" system, in which there is one team that covers the patients from 7am until 7 pm and another team that covers the patients from 7pm until 7am every night of the week. Saturday and Sunday nights the "day team" people rotate the overnight coverage in the traditional call system of what has recently been reduced to a 30 hour shift.
This means that I and my fellow interns are a month the luckiest in the country because rather than spending 9 or 10 nights a month in the hospital, we are there for just 2 or 3.
This has its good and bad points. The good is, clearly, the ability to sleep in your own bed, and the actual part about sleeping is a real highlight. It means we are supposed to be less fatigued in our daily activities and this is intended to make everyone safer.
The downside is that there are things you learn how to do on call that you just don't learn how to do anywhere else or at any other time. When you are on call, you are first in line to get to do procedures, and the senior resident backs you up and steps in if you can't do it. You are the person responsible for making decisions ranging from the mundane ("this patient hasn't pooped in three days, can you order him a laxative?" ...something that is clearly urgent at 3am) to the interesting ("this patient's blood pressure is 78/40, what do you want us to do.") There is an element of facing a challenge and solving the problem that belongs to your hours on call that helps shape doctors from know nothings like me into confident men and women who can solve problems even when they are a little drowsy...think of how well it prepares them to think when they are rested.
Anyway, that is my digression about the call system in my program, and all in all I have to say that I would take what we have now over the days of endless shifts and every other night call and walking through the hospital in five feet of snow up hill both ways that our attendings apparently had to endure, because they remind us of it often and readily.
The short of it that I can't really believe all that I've learned in this past two weeks. The MICU I'm working in has been rather slow for business, but I've been getting to see enough to learn, and having just a handful of patients means I have the time and energy to spend learning, rather than just trying to keep my head on straight.
I'm feeling more confident, but waiting for that moment when I flub up horribly, so that keeps me from getting to excited just yet.
I'm not as afraid of nurses anymore.
I'm still worried about getting called to put in an IV because I frankly wouldn't know here to begin.
I'm nervous about being called with a question that I can't answer...although that is just about every question right now.
And I am truly terrified of someone having a CODE BLUE, and me being a central player in that whole crazy mess.
Overall, though, I just can't complain about how things are going so far. I think I prepared myself for the worst and so far my experience has been, dare I say it...enjoyable?
I know I haven't seen the worst of it yet, though, and that things can and often do, go downhill fast. Like the knowledge that my first big screw up could be just the next pager beep away, it keeps me from getting too comfortable.
In general, I think I am a happier person now that I am back to work, back to a schedule, back to doing something that I really enjoy. Not that staying at home with little to do for the past several weeks wasn't enoyable, but I was beginning to get bored with myself and I have to say it was affecting my mood and my outlook... and Tommy will nod his head in agreement here when I say I have been much more pleasant to be around since this all began.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Doctor? Who? Me?

Well, because it would be sad to let it go to waste, here is something I started writing two weeks ago on my first overnight call (July 2nd, my second day of residency)...it never got finished.


July 1 is a day that should be on everyone's calendar. It should be declared, "Don't Show Up at the Hospital Because If You Do You Might be Taken Care of By Someone Who has Been a Doctor For Exactly One Day," Day.

Walking into the MICU on Saturday Morning was an odd thing. I had no idea where to go, and frankly no idea what to do once I got there. I entered the unit and spotted a nurse, and said, "Hi, I'm Emily and today is my very first day as an intern and I don't know where I'm supposed to go."
She could have been really mean or really rude. Actually, though, she was very nice. All of the nurses were nice that morning. I admit I'd been expecting the worst. I was expecting to be welcomed less than warmly by the people who will have to deal with me and the rest of my intern class as we learn the ropes and figure out to do this doctor thing. They are the ones who have to scramble to draw blood when we forget to order a lab test, or have to call us when we forget to write a standing order for a pain medication. They have to do what we ask when they have been doing their job just fine for many many years and we have been on the job for just the blink of an eye. In some ways, I don't blame them for having a bad attitude toward us, but I never knew what a huge difference it would make to get to work with nurses who are actually kind and warm and who, at midnight when they are ordering Chinese food, are actually nice enough to ask you if you'd like to order something, too.
Anyway, that is how I feel about the nurses here at the VA MICU.
So day 1 arrived and I felt both excited and incompetent. The exciting part was that I was finally starting to work, and I know that this next year is going to be the time when I learn more than I've ever learned before. Incompetent because, well, I am going to spend this year learning more than I've ever learned before, but I'm going to be responsible for all of those things I have yet to learn.
As the first day on any new job goes, there was a lot of having to ask where things are, how to et places, the protocol for addressing certain issues. And the most important part of any first day---finding the nearest restroom.
Overall the day went well. The strangest part of the day was when the attending introduced me to one of my patient's families as," Dr. Riegel," and informed them that I'd be "primarily responsible for Mr.R's care." I hate to admit it, but tears came to my eyes when he said that.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

On The Brink

I have the four extra years of education.
I have the diploma.
I have a new stethoscope.
I have the knee-length white coats.

In two days I am going to walk into a patient's room and introduce myself as "Emily Riegel, your doctor."

Like I mentioned for the photo above, there was no microchip slipped into our rbains at any point during the graduation week events, nor since then at the endlessly boring days of orientation I've been attending. In fact, I am really starting to think there will be no microchip.

What I am looking at instead is a huge shelf of books, filled with details of anatomy, biochemistry, physiology, all the secrets of the inner workings of the human organism. I think at some point, much of that information was supposed to become lodged in my brain, at a place readily accessible for future use.

The problem is, I'm not so sure where exactly it is in my brain, nor if it was ever actually firmly lodged there in the first place.

Come Saturday, though, I'm being entrusted with people's well being...or as well as their being is while they are in the medical ICU at the Kansas City VA.

Of course I've been given the "help is never more than a phone call away," and "you won't be allowed to do anything unless you are comfortable doing it," and even better, "you're just the intern, no one expects much of you the first few months."

Despite all the reassurances and good advice we've all been given, there are worries in my mind that just can't be addressed until I am in the situations that I actually worry about. Whether it's how I'm going to stay awake to drive home after being up all night at the hospital, or what I'm going to tell the nurse to do when she tells me that my patient has a fever, or how I'll react when I have a patient die for the first time...you just have to get through those things yourself in order to know how you'll handle them. Even then, you know the next time will be different, or better, or worse.

This is going to be a whole new adventure.

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