Monday, December 10, 2012

interaction

Let me slide needles into your flesh. Let me put my hands on your skin. Let me press into your aches and pains and ask you if it hurts. Let me slice into you with knives and scissors.

Tell me about your pain. Let me ask you about your secrets, your addictions, the last time you bled or shat or felt this way. Tell me about your family. Answer honestly.

I see about 20 patients during a 10 hour night shift in ER. I usually meet them with a resigned expression; I'm tired, the last patient was a dick, something smells bad, and I could really use a coffee. And then I violate them. I ask them questions I wouldn't ask my partner. I touch them in places I wouldn't touch my own child.

Most of the time, I try to be pleasant and positive; patients are less likely to make your night hell if you communicate well and explain what you're doing. But sometimes, at 3am, you dissociate from yourself and think, "Jesus. I just met you, and this is crazy. But here's my ID, now let me stab you..."

Carly Rae Jepsen may be on the radio during this moment.

Night shifts are done for 2012. The next challenges are working ER during New Years, then going to work with the Orthopods in fracture clinic. And what to do with oneself during a Monday off in cold, rainy Toronto.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Regrets...

I have been trying to calculate out the cost of being a doctor in Canada.
In Australia, it was fairly straightforward; the cost of medical school, plus living expenses, for 4.5 years. You apply for jobs, get interviewed, and get hired by a hospital.  You get paid a salary for your work at the hospital. It is less than a full "Staff" salary, because they assume you will be taking time for learning and education, but you make a living wage for the hours you work.

In Canada, you have to pay to apply for jobs. It costs about 200 bucks to THINK about applying, then, for every school you send a letter to, they charge you another 50-80 dollars. If you get interviews, add transportation costs and accommodation to the bill.

Once interviews are done, you rank the universities from one to ten, or six, or x. Then you wait.

On a specific day, you log in to your account and see what school has picked you. You only get one offer. If you are offered the position, you are legally required to take it. Boom. Five years of your life are set in stone, all through luck of the draw. I did this, and got sent to U of T for my family med program. Yes, it was my first choice, but I don't know that I'd make it twice.

So, back to my interviews. I now know that I want further training in Emergency Medicine so I saddled up for the CaRM's rodeo once again; application fee, individual university application fees, rental car, flights, hotels in Kingston, Ottawa & St Johns. I figure, all in, I'll have spent about $2000 by the time this process is up.

People keep telling me the cost is an investment in my future. And sure, if I get the job, it will all have been worth it. But the ER match is not guaranteed. They interview 40 candidates for 4 places in Ottawa. The odds aren't much better anywhere else.

An investment is where you put your money into a holding pattern, hoping that it will increase in value over time. 1/10 odds sound more like gambling.

Frankly, there are a lot of other things I could do with $2000. Things that don't require me to explain my best qualities to a panel of bored and cranky interviewers.

O Australia. How I miss you.



Tuesday, October 2, 2012

boredom

The nights are dark and still and cold now. In the morning, frost clings to the grass. I leave a trail of footprints on the nature strip and track dew into the clinic. Nature provides a symphony of sensory delights in gorgeous Kincardine.

I am so bored.

The surgeon has moved out of the Locum House, taking away the element of chaos. Say what you will about ego & man... every house needs a force of nature who comes home and says "We're going to play volleyball now".

I am getting lots of sleep. Exercising for at least an hour a day. Cooking balanced and elaborate meals. Painting my toenails. Finishing my assignments early. Preparing for my exams in May.

I keep volunteering to work more in ER, but my boss feels I should work in clinic with him. Clinic is a good learning experience. Clinic is orderly and structured. Clinic is deadly boring...

When you apply for your Rural Rotation, you can choose to do 2 months back to back or seperate them out. They suggest that you double up, "to get the true rural live-work experience". I have been here for 5.3 weeks. I have such bad cabin fever that I considered getting drunk tonight as a means to kill time.

I am living the true rural experience. 

Thursday, August 30, 2012

What Happens at Work...

Yesterday I had an afternoon off. Between 12 and 6pm, I wandered the sunny streets of Kincardine, napped, ate cookies and wrote thank you notes.

Between the hours of 12 and 6 pm, two people came in to the Emergency Department and died.

A woman had come in to hospital with shortness of breath. It had been going on for several days, but was now getting worse to the point that she and her husband were worried. They dropped the dog off at the groomers and brought her to ER. She walked in gasping, and wheezing. They put her on a stretched, she arrested and she died. It was completely unexpected.

Her husband was obviously terribly distressed. He went to pick up the dog before telling his family about the sudden tragedy that had struck them. He was in the parking lot outside the dog groomers when he collapsed. The ambulance was there in 5 minutes, but by the time he arrived in ER, he was dead too.

Husband and wife from healthy and well to stone cold in 5 hours.

I arrived at 6 to meet a shaken supervising Doctor. He had offered to cover the half-shift from 1-6 so his colleague could attend a meeting. He was not expecting a day like this.

My night, after 6pm, was uneventful with respect to the patients. I, on the other hand, blacked out while fighting with a drug addict. I woke up in the resuscitation room with my boss listening to my chest. "Did you know you have a heart murmur?" he asked. "Do you think you could be pregnant?".

The nurses brought me orange juice and petted me and called me sweetie for the rest of the night. I got up, saw patients until 1am, then went home to sleep. There was no reason for me to faint (eg: not prego). I was not expecting a night like that.

On again Friday. I don't know what to hope for, but whatever happens, it will be interesting.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

I know this place

I am on day 3 of my rural rotation and I have a strong sense of deja vu. My intern year included 3 months in Warrnambool; a small town on the southern coast of Australia. Kincardine is a small town on Lake Huron, which might as well be the ocean. Wide streets, gorgeous blue skies and lots of leafy trees. The only difference is the accent.

The rural placement is a bizarre situation. Designed by medical schools to encourage rural practice, they are often incredibly luxurious. Right now I'm sitting in a 5 bedroom architectural gem, where sunlight streams from every window and Adirondack chairs overlook the hummingbird garden. I walk to work, have my scrubs provided, nurses prep and review each patient before I see them and I'm out on time every day. Luxury. Right?

Well. Tonight I'm running the ER overnight. Most of the time this means coughs, cuts and chest pain. Sometimes it means managing a stabbing from the local pub. Sometimes they have a 3 vehicle pileup on the freeway and send the mangled bits your way. The other Docs can be called in, but you're the first port of call.

Great luxury? Great responsibility. To paraphrase Alfred.


In the 'Bool, I coped by coming home every day and watching Friday Night Lights. Today, as I try to sleep under a blanket of anxiety, I attempted The Newsroom.

I'm gonna need another distraction.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Blip!

Anaesthetics has previously been described as 98% boredom, 2% disaster.
This is apt.

However, this is also a perfect description for weekend call on Internal Medicine. I spent my morning scrolling through bloodwork results, checking vital signs, writing succinct notes to demonstrate due diligence and thinking about afternoon tea. It was dry, mind-numbing work, but I powered through and got it done.

Finally, I got my chai latte & rice-krispie square (delightful!) and sat down for 15 minutes of well deserved rest.

My pager went off.

"Patient desaturated to 75%, not responsive, please come ASAP"

The next 2.5 hours are lost in a blur of suctioning, blood gases, sternal rubs, compressions and ultimately, begging the ICU doctor to take my patient to a safe place. That is, a place he can be intubated.

I stumbled back into the Doctor's lounge and was surprised to find my latte was cold. I was drenched in sweat. My hands are still shaking. I have 22 unanswered pages.

Internal Medicine: 90% paperwork, 10% shit hitting fan.

0% afternoon tea.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Joy!*

I have been dreading my family medicine clinic all week; I haven't seen my patients in a MONTH and I was expecting an afternoon of drear, gloom and complaints about life.

I got giggly babies, fetal heart rates, happy chat with my mentally challenged patient (she has a new boyfriend who is really really nice to her and takes her on bike rides) and a new installment of the "My Weird Penis" show. (This week's contestant had surgery to have small plastic lumps inserted under his penile skin "to give ladies pleasure". I don't know if he meant my irrepressible mirth, but it certainly worked.)

I have but 2.5 weeks of internal medicine to go. Yes, it's a hellish slog that sucks joy from my life and colour from my cheeks, but it has it's benefits. Specifically, it forces me to appreciate my career choice.

So, yes! Bring me your tired. Your back pain. Your poopy babies and your sore knees. Your weird rashes and your dribbly genitals. Bring it all, bring it on! I love my job!

*It should be noted that I consumed an entire jar of leftover frosting before composing this post. FYI.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Truth!

My dentist thinks I'm awesome. In fact, he thinks my life and my choices are so awesome that he would like me to sit down with his 13 year old daughter and give her life advice. If I hadn't had 17 steel pointy things embedded in my gums, I might have laughed at this.

I've been home (on vacation) for 3 days. I wake up reaching for my pager. Friends ask me how work is going and I tell them I'm dead inside. My "hilarious anecdotes" of time on the wards are met with silence. All I want is to sleep, but I am too anxious to relax. Would wish this life on a 13 year old?

I will admit, there are aspects of the job that I like. I like working with people. I like looking for clues about what's wrong, then testing my hypothesis with treatment. I like when I get it right. I like figuring out where I'm going wrong. I like the adrenaline of Code Blues. I like the warm fuzzies of family meetings. I like the camaraderie of Team Medicine. BUT I would like it to happen in manageable, 12 hour stretches, with ample rest and recuperation in between.

Anyways, my life advice for 13 year old girls (me) would be:
- If you can do it for 3 hours in a row without noticing time pass, it's a passion.
- If it makes you feel stronger, smarter and more engaged with the world around you, keep doing it.
- If it gets in the way of your hobbies and you feel stressed, stop doing it.
- Don't worry too much about finding boys/girls/romance.The bad ones are passive and hard work and will exhaust you. The good ones will find you and make your life more fun.
- Don't let your parents tell you what you like. Don't let your friends tell you what you like. You are the only one who has to live with your choices, and no matter what you choose, you'll end up annoying someone. Don't let it be you.

Presumably she (I) would roll her eyes at me. Then I would take her out for a blizzard, buy her clothes her parents won't like and tell her to call me anytime.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Ethics 200

I have this patient. She weighs 900lbs. Her fat is killing her.

She was admitted to hospital about 7 months ago with a leg infection. She only weighed 700lbs then, was able to get around with a scooter, and was very very unhealthy, but still living relatively independently.

Since she has come to hospital, she has gained 200lbs. How? By ordering pizza. By asking the nurses to bring her T-Ho's "Iced capps" or get frappucinos (extra whip) for her. By snacking.

She is no longer able to turn herself. She is so heavy that she cannot roll from side to side. She has developed bedsores. They are infected. This week, we had a discussion with her and her family about the fact that, should she have a cardiac arrest, we will not be able to resuscitate her.

Why don't we stop her from eating?

Because, in Canada, individual rights trump common sense (or medical experience). She is a human who wants to eat herself to death. We must respect her right to do this.

I have issues with this:

1. People who refuse food (anorexics) are considered mentally ill. We force feed them. This woman is literally eating herself to death. She is aware that her food choices are killing her, but she cannot stop eating. However, as food addiction is considered a life-choice (like alcoholism or smoking) we must allow her to continue.

2. Suicidal patients have their human rights temporarily violated until can be treated for their intention to self-harm. This woman's in-hospital weight gain is an act of self-harm. As such, we should be able to temporarily restrict her caloric intake until she has undergone psychiatric assessment and treatment.

3. She is not capable of getting this food by herself. She only gets these extra/unnecessary calories when hospital staff bring them to her. Just as smokers are allowed to leave the hospital to smoke, we could allow her to snack as long as she gets the snacks herself. We are enabling her by providing her with toxic food.

4. She is currently costing the Canadian health care system 10,000 dollars a day. Our socialist system does not have an unlimited budget. She is currently scheduled to stay in hospital until she dies, because there is no other facility that can hold or treat her. Even if we argue that her individual rights should allow her to kill herself, surely the collective rights of the Canadian people outweigh this. She should be restricted to a sensible diet until she is mobile can be managed in a less expensive facility where she is not taking a hospital bed from someone else.

Alas, I am not in charge. She will stay until her wounds become too infected, her heart gives up or she chokes on her own fatty tissues. This could be tomorrow, it could be next year. So it goes.

I miss the Australian medical system; I remember my boss saying, "I'm the doctor, I'm responsible, why should I let this bloody idiot kill himself under my care?"

Canadian medicine is too precious for my taste. I'll take common sense over individual rights any day.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Existential Crisis

Everything is heightened when you don't sleep. I've been on call for 72 hours in the last 5 days. Last night my pager went off at 5am and I woke to run to a Code Blue. 45 seconds from waking to pushing down on a man's rib-cage so hard that his ribs scrunched. He died anyways. It was truly horrifying, but I didn't have time to process it during the night. Today, I had nightmares.

Of course, this highly emotional state leads to big questions; what am I doing with my life? Am I making the right choices? Should I cut off all my hair?

I don't think I'll ever get convincing answers. And I don't know if it's better to roll the dice, despite your doubts, or to hold off and wait until you're sure. I've been alive for 31 years, and the only thing I was sure of, medicine, is making me question everything else.

Blah blah blah. Deep thoughts have no place in a post-call brain. Forgive the maudlin crap, I will be back and bright tomorrow. With proper medical tales to tickle your brain and poke your gag reflex.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Why I hate people.

At 7pm tonight, I got a page from the post-partum nursing station.

"We've got a patient here; baby is 48 hours old, has a bilirubin of 185. GBS-, term baby, normal delivery, no risk factors. We were going to send them home, but Mum is really worried that the bilirubin is going up."

Me: Ok, I'll go talk to them.
Nurse: Um...they want to know what the plan is...
Me: Ok. I'll send them home tonight, but ask them to come back for a repeat blood test in the morning, just to make sure.
Nurse: So...you agree that they should go home?

That should have been my first red flag.

I discussed the case with my staff pediatrician. He agreed - the baby did not need treatment, but should return tomorrow for a repeat blood test.

I walked into the patient's room, pleasant and smiling, ready to tell them the good news.

Me; "Good news! Your baby is well. She doesn't need treatment. You can go home tonight!"

All hell broke loose.

In the room I had 2 sets of grandparents, a crazed post-partum mother and a small (apparently inconsequential) baby. All of them, except the baby, started yelling at me.

"We can't leave. It's 7 o'clock at night and we live in Scarborough!"
"This baby is sick, you said we had to come back tomorrow anyways, how can you make us leave?"
"What do you mean the baby is well? She is turning yellow!"

Ah, I thought. These people are worried about their baby. I will give them reassurance.

Me: Your baby is actually ok. It is very normal for babies to have some level of jaundice in the first days of life. Her level is not dangerous.

"How can that be true? She is turning yellow!"
"My daughter had jaundice too! I know what this is! She's sick"
"Even if she's fine, what if she's not fine tomorrow, you can't tell us to leave!"
"It'll take us 2 hours to pack up all our stuff and we didn't bring a car seat!"
" We were told we could stay until 11 am tomorrow!"

Ah, I thought. These people don't understand jaundice. I was about to start explaining when...

Grandfather: "It's snowing out. You want us to take this sick baby out in the snow, then put her in the car when you don't know what could happen to us on the road?"
Grandma 1: "I just want you to hear what I'm saying, we want to stay till tomorrow because it's going to be very annoying for us to go all the way home tonight and come all the way back tomorrow".
Grandma 2: "The baby has jaundice, the numbers have gone up. You said it yourself. You said the baby is sick."

Ah, I thought. These people are ignorant fucktards, and I would be doing the baby a favor if I gave her to a pack of wolves to be raised.

I kept trying to explain, but everything I said was ignored. Finally, I said, "This baby does not need treatment tonight. She is well. Her numbers are not in the dangerous range and so she is safe to go home."

Grandma 2: "I don't believe you. I want a second opinion and another doctor. A real doctor."

At this point I excused myself from the room. I took a deep breath.

When I came back in to tell them they could have what they want, I didn't expect gratitude. And my expectations were way too high:

"You know, you are the reason people complain about the human face of healthcare."
"It's not personal, we respect you as a doctor, but you have to know that we're right..."

This is the edited version. The actual event took about 2 hours. On the plus side, I made 8 dollars.

Lord.
Just 11 hours of this shit to go. (I wrote shift, but I believe my typo speaks the truth).

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

NPR

Neonatal resuscitation follows the same principles as adult resuscitation, right? Like, babies should be, like, breathing and stuff. They should totally have, like, heart beats. And oxygen. Oxygen is totes essential.

This was my approach to NRP (and not NPR, as I've been calling it). I thought that newborns were much like tiny tiny adults, and that you could simply open their mouths, grab their wrists for a pulse and treat them like grownups.

Wrong.

Scenario:
Baby is blue. What do you do?
Me: Um, intubate them and start CPAP.
NRP: Wrong. You popped the tiny lungs and now the baby is dead.
Me: !
Me: Um, ok. Just apply the mask and give CPAP.
NRP: Wrong. There was baby-poop in the baby's throat and now it's dead.
Me: !!
Me: Well, what if I just open the airway with this head position and bag and mask the baby until help arrives.
NRP: Wrong. You have the baby's head in the wrong position. And it is...
Me: Dead. Slippery little suckers, aren't they.
NRP: !!!

The correct choice? Don't answer your pager.

Clearly, everything I do to this baby is lethal or torturous or both. Might as well hide in the call room watching "Say Yes to the Dress" marathons and practicing my penmanship. Letters from inmates are all the rage these days.

Disclaimer: My NRP exam is tomorrow. I am only studying. I have not killed any babies yet. I do not intend to.

The babies may have other plans.
I'll keep you posted.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Happy Baby Posture

Remember medical school? Remember when all you wanted was to be around soft, squishy, wiggly babies all the time? Remember when you thought that nothing could be more delightful than baby-time, all the time?

Turns out you were right. I'm doing pediatrics right now, and baby-time is the BEST!

I start every morning with a round of the NICU, picking up babies that fit into my palm, poking their tummies, tickling their feet. Sometimes I cuddle them and get to feed them. Sometimes I stroke their soft spots until they calm.

Then, I go to clinic. All day, people bring their tiny adorable children to me. I sometimes get to watch them play (developmental clinic), sometimes get to help them eat (nutrition clinic) and sometimes get to wiggle their feet (well-baby checks).

So why am I 100% happy I'm going to be a family doctor, instead of a pediatrician?

Because sometimes your pager goes off at 1am for a "Code Pink".

Sometimes the baby is born early, at 33 weeks. And you have to run this tiny sack of skin down the hall and place it on a warming table. You have to bag & mask while your boss gets the tubes ready. You have to hold it still as a tube is forced down it's throat, then watch blood bubble up. You have to squeeze a chest the size of a toy, squeeze it with both hands until you feel it crunch flat. Keep squeezing at a rate of 100bpm. And then send the baby to Sick Kids, not knowing if what you've done caused harm or helped.

Sometimes there's a Code OB - emergency C sections for fetal distress. For these, you're doing the procedures in the OR and you can hear the Obstetricians behind you saying things like, "She's crashing!" and "Why are her O2 sats dropping?". And meanwhile, the baby is white as paper due to a lack of circulation.

Sure, not all pediatrics is so dramatic. But sometimes kids get sick cos of parental neglect. Sometimes they get sick cos they got into Gran's medicine. Sometimes they just get sick. And sick kids are the saddest thing in the world.

So, I am truly thrilled to be a Family Doctor. The kids I see have coughs, colds and rashes. They will pee on me while I try and find their testicles (harder than it sounds). They will puke on my lap and poop on my examining table. But 99% of them will go home with Mum, returning in 6 months for their annual shots.

And those are the babies I want to see. I'll send the rest on to the Pediatricians, and wish them all luck.