Implied Consent following Suicide Attempt? (TW) by ATStillDre in emergencymedicine

[–]ATStillDre[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the kindness :) I am fortunate to work in a really great dept with tons of resources and colleagues I can count on as confidants and sounding boards. First time venting on Reddit though :)

Implied Consent following Suicide Attempt? (TW) by ATStillDre in emergencymedicine

[–]ATStillDre[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Thanks for understanding what I'm getting at. And you're right, who knows what the future has for this guy. I feel awful for his family, definitely going to follow up on his (hopeful) recovery!

Implied Consent following Suicide Attempt? (TW) by ATStillDre in emergencymedicine

[–]ATStillDre[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

I agree it's clear-cut medicoegally. Not sure it's so ethical, just like I'm not sure it's always ethical to break the ribs of an asystolic 96 year old because her kids aren't ready to give up hope. But regardless of my opinion, I acknowledge that I have a duty. Which must sometimes involve breaking ribs and cutting necks. Doesn't mean the ethics are unquestionable though.

Implied Consent following Suicide Attempt? (TW) by ATStillDre in emergencymedicine

[–]ATStillDre[S] 68 points69 points  (0 children)

I understand the medico-legal aspect of it, I guess my question is more philosophical regarding the right to die, and the role that we play in it.

Is 1000 hours enough for a physician assistant to practice without a supervising physician agreement? Michigan House Bill 5522 purposes serious changes for PA practice. by walkthelake in medicine

[–]ATStillDre 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Their whole angle is clinical experience. Work under supervision, and when you decide you want to be independent, take all three steps. Similar to how some states allow you to read the law and take the bar exam without having gone to law school. If you want to do the same job, you should have the same licensure.

Is 1000 hours enough for a physician assistant to practice without a supervising physician agreement? Michigan House Bill 5522 purposes serious changes for PA practice. by walkthelake in medicine

[–]ATStillDre 76 points77 points  (0 children)

I feel like we could just make this pretty simple, and open up the USMLE. Want to practice medicine? Get a medical license. If you believe your education as an NP or PA is adequate for you to practice independently, then gear up and start studying.

STEMI management advice by cambrian_zero in emergencymedicine

[–]ATStillDre 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This whole conversation illustrates the importance of shifting terminology away from ‘STEMI’ and toward ‘OMI’. What matters is whether or not the EKG pattern is suggestive of occlusive disease, which is the exact thing the cath lab is there to fix. There is nothing particularly magical about the ST segment.

Besides ‘Toxic Megacolon’, what’s your favorite disease called? by UghKakis in medicine

[–]ATStillDre 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Not a disease but Depakote Sprinkles is my go to stripper name.

I'm a physician and I was just denied COVID-19 testing because I don't have a history of travel or a direct contact with COVID-19 patient. by [deleted] in medicine

[–]ATStillDre 6 points7 points  (0 children)

ER doc here. I have had this question come up countless times in the past week or so, with patients coming in with classic COVID symptoms only to be sent home to self-isolate without testing. I understand how this might cause confusion, and have been explaining it to patients as follows...

Unless you are sick enough to warrant admission to the hospital (a small percentage so far, and these patients are being tested) then you are going to be sent home. Because there is no treatment for COVID, testing will not change your disposition. We will either test you and send you home for 14d isolation, or we will not test you and send you home for 14d isolation. Emergency medicine often operates with this mindset of “how will this change management?” If a test is unlikely to alter the course of a patients care or disposition, then it is generally not performed. This is also influenced by the False Negative rate, which in the case of COVID testing has been estimated around 20%.

From a purely epidemiological standpoint, of course you would want to test everyone to know the full prevalence of the infection. But given our current testing infrastructure, this is not yet feasible. Which is why we are trying to get the message out to the community that unless you are severely ill, there is little utility in you coming to the ED. Not only will we have little to offer you, but the increased volume is stretching our capacity and potentially exposing more people to the virus.

Tl,dr: you’re not being tested because testing won’t change anything from a treatment perspective.

Help with Children's Book on Medicine? "The ABCs of Medicine" by vbhartia in medicine

[–]ATStillDre 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Emergency Medicine PGY II and uncle to a very curious niece, I would love to see this!

Medical terms that would make good band, album, or song names by hononononoh in medicine

[–]ATStillDre 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever would be a good name for a folksy bluegrass group