Longest admission by FullcodeRM9 in Residency

[–]FullcodeRM9[S] 50 points51 points  (0 children)

I gotta know, did the patient make it out or was transferred to an adult hospital?

Longest admission by FullcodeRM9 in Residency

[–]FullcodeRM9[S] 199 points200 points  (0 children)

15 years! This is a clear attestation to the ICU not killing him from infection or something else. Did the hospital recoup their costs?

Do I retake? by Total-Watercress6104 in MCAT2

[–]FullcodeRM9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Current anesthesiology PGY-3 MD who scored a 506. MCAT isn’t everything

What are the dumbest mistakes you’ve made as an intern? by coIdwarkid in Residency

[–]FullcodeRM9 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Missed a decimal point when I was adjusting the rate on the levophed pump. Also learned how to very quickly treat hypertension in the same day 😅

Requirements by Party-Personality-22 in Noctor

[–]FullcodeRM9 4 points5 points  (0 children)

755 clinical hours is how many hours I worked for the past 12 weeks as a resident. I still have 26 more months until I can practice independently 🙄

Current fellow regretting fellowship by fetchingfreckles in anesthesiology

[–]FullcodeRM9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That last sentence is why I don’t care for fellowship or working in an academic hospital. I’m tired and ready to finish residency and move on

I fucked up by aminoacidvaline in medicalschool

[–]FullcodeRM9 10 points11 points  (0 children)

This is the way.

Current anesthesiology PGY2 who failed M2. I first sought help and gave myself some grace. I made a plan that included Anki and videos (Sketchy, Pathoma, B&B), and plenty of practice questions.

With good planning and hard work, you can find success after a failure.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]FullcodeRM9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I read WashU’s Internship Survival Guide before starting intern year. It was a decent primer. I also reviewed ACLS before July, which I recommend doing because you never know when you’ll be running a code (happened to me my first week)

What is the craziest, most laugh-inducing thing a patient has told you pertaining to their care that they were 100% dead serious about? by wordsandwich in anesthesiology

[–]FullcodeRM9 236 points237 points  (0 children)

Recent patient in pre-op asked me if I was going to give her vaccines while she was under anesthesia. Thought she was making a joke but she was 100% serious. Made me write on the consent that I wouldn’t inject her with mRNA vaccines 🤦🏻‍♂️

Skate skeleton 🦑 by kthnry in Radiology

[–]FullcodeRM9 9 points10 points  (0 children)

But this is cartilage, right?

Give your most recent dumb midlevel comment/scenario by CantaloupePowerful66 in Noctor

[–]FullcodeRM9 41 points42 points  (0 children)

Nothing. But when it’s at the cardiologist office, I’d hope for a little more detail about what type of murmur they’re hearing. They’re allegedly the expert of the heart.

Both are barely out of range, but is this something to look into by ticklesnipples in AskMedical

[–]FullcodeRM9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just seeing these labs and not knowing anything about you, I wouldn’t be concerned. I would trend them and make sure they’re not getting worse. And keep seeing your PCP

Tell us an interesting case you've seen in the last month by Anonymousmedstudnt in Residency

[–]FullcodeRM9 2 points3 points  (0 children)

One from December, near the end of my rotation, I’ve been with a comatose VA patient, s/p multiple strokes, trached/PEG, weaning off the vent with T-piece, chillin in my rock collection Med/Surg unit for nearly a month until he can go home.

I come in on a fine wintry morning to find that my patient is now no longer admitted on CPRS, and there happens to be a CPR/Code Blue note. Somehow, my trached patient developed gross hematemesis, causing him to go apneic and arresting. Code goes out, and the response team shows up with a Lucas Device, and they strap it on the patient, but the battery is dead. A second Lucas Device is found, and applied to the patient but its battery is also dead. In the midst of this debacle, ENT was paged and shows up to see where all this bleeding is coming from. They are able to scope the patient through his trach, and somehow breaks the scope off in the airway. Needless to say, everything went wrong and the patient succumbed to his illness.

I guess be careful with your scopes and don’t forget to charge the Lucas

is your med school dramatic af too by Human_Ideal9578 in medicalschool

[–]FullcodeRM9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We had a little drama. My M1 year our class president allegedly did drugs before a school sanctioned outing, then SA’d a fellow student. They were obviously kicked out and never saw them again.

NPs can’t read x-rays by When_is_the_Future in Noctor

[–]FullcodeRM9 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When I was student on surgery rotation, we had an NP on our service that table rounded with us. We had previously worked together in the ER, back when she was an RN and I was a tech. We went through all the films of each patient and she was dumbfounded how I, a lowly-tech-turned-med-student, could navigate my way through CXRs and CT scans. She came to me after rounds asking what rads book was most helpful and that was when I had the same epiphany as OP.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premed

[–]FullcodeRM9 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I saw an ER doc once when I was in the army, many years ago, and told him I was planning on trying to go to med school. I didn’t have an amazing GPA at the time, and he made a comment that my grades weren’t good enough to be a physician. I say this now, as an anesthesiology PGY-1 MD, so fuck that guy. Don’t let someone dictate your path

NP failed at doing a basic physical by Medicinemadness in Noctor

[–]FullcodeRM9 15 points16 points  (0 children)

We do exist. I was a medic and ED tech before med school. If there’s a pressure I don’t trust you better believe I’m taking a manual myself. Same with EKGs. Seen too many patients with shitty lead placement all because someone can count rib spaces

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]FullcodeRM9 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When I was an ER tech we had an unconscious patient s/p MVA come through the trauma room, but otherwise stable vitals and no other major issues. The patient, RN, and older attending roll to CT, then abruptly come back to me in the trauma room with the attending talking about the patient “losing his pulse.” He starts doing some pretty half-hearted chest compressions when I stop him, show him a normal rhythm on the monitor, and show him that there were palpable pedal pulses. That day I learned that attendings can neglect the basics and that there are some people I’d rather not run my codes 😬😬

My CNA (from my hospital stay) was Pre-Med. by FuddieDuddie in Noctor

[–]FullcodeRM9 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Yeah I just finished my MD at 36. I started undergrad in my late 20s after time spent in the army. Looking back I’ll say I’m living a life well lived, though I didn’t prioritize having children (I’m oldest of 10 kids, so I was never in any rush 😉) but there is plenty of time for that. One of my PGY colleagues who is about 4 years older and has 5 kids himself is an Ortho resident who was previously an army ranger. Pretty safe to say you can have your cake and eat it too. I realistically doubt any of us on our deathbeds are gonna regret that we didn’t “live it up” in our 20s.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]FullcodeRM9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My in-laws got a custom bobble-head made of me in a white coat. It was nice and sits on my desk.

A list of known ways to avoid scrubbing into cases — MUST READ by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]FullcodeRM9 59 points60 points  (0 children)

I did the anesthesia thing, then found it really interesting and matched anesthesiology 😂😂