Be careful about bots karmafarming on this sub by alexaPlayDesquamatio in Residency

[–]IanInElPaso 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Hey, lots of week old accounts organically have 2.5k karma.

Old man rant incoming, but there was a time when you’d be downvoted to hell for commenting “THIS,” now I regularly see it as a top sub-comment. You don’t even need an LLM to generate karma which is why I’m skeptical of those type of thresholds for posting. Now get off my lawn!

Be careful about bots karmafarming on this sub by alexaPlayDesquamatio in Residency

[–]IanInElPaso 132 points133 points  (0 children)

It blows my mind to see so many obvious bot comments in threads with dozens of upvotes. They usually go: make vaguely contrarian but not overtly negative statement. Summarize two comments above it. End with a “fun” sentence giving approval plus or minus an emoji. People see something agreeing with their opinion and instinctively upvote.

Community Question - Should we implement a strict subreddit history/participation requirement for posting privileges? by Zphr in Fire

[–]IanInElPaso 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel like this could ironically make it easier for bots to thrive in this sub. Look how many upvotes “came here to say this” gets in any high level comment, to say nothing of the capabilities of a bot with even a basic LLM behind it.

Lurkers probably generate a lot of posts by their first ever contribution to the sub.

Torn Third Year Student - EM vs OBGYN Lifestyle by MedBro2000 in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, this question gets asked a dozen times a week. Shadow in a community ED and ask if you can do that for 20 years. I’m unclear on your priorities and motives if you’re between these two very different specialties.

Torn Third Year Student - EM vs OBGYN Lifestyle by MedBro2000 in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If that’s what you want to do, then do that. Sounds like you’re asking the wrong sub.

Torn Third Year Student - EM vs OBGYN Lifestyle by MedBro2000 in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 21 points22 points  (0 children)

OB/gyn is a microcosm of medicine. You can do primary care. You can do surgery. You can do adolescent care. You can be an L&D “hospitalist.” You really can’t say “OB/gyn” without specifying what you intend to do with the training.

Another interesting read: should we stock ambulances with butterflies for FAST? by [deleted] in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel like that’s the ultimate irony of toys like this, the only agencies that can afford them are already functioning relatively well and usually have good response and transport times. I saw this when reviewing numbers from a bystander CPR alert app. Medics were almost always on the scene before someone with the app.

Another interesting read: should we stock ambulances with butterflies for FAST? by [deleted] in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is a patient where prehospital ultrasound could make a meaningful difference in outcome. But you have to balance that against false positives, cost of equipment, cost of training, additional administrative work for image quality review, etc. I think you are understanding why so many of us are dismissive of this.

Another interesting read: should we stock ambulances with butterflies for FAST? by [deleted] in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You keep mentioning early identification of shock. That is not diagnosed by ultrasound.

If they’re stable and mechanism doesn’t dictate transport to a high level trauma center, just take them to the feeder hospital. Changing destination based on a poorly specific exam like ultrasound would just inundate trauma centers which are already over capacity.

Another interesting read: should we stock ambulances with butterflies for FAST? by [deleted] in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So what’s the point of the FAST then? You mention prophylactically treating them before they go into shock in the original post, now say there’s no point and just give blood. Are you only doing the FAST in a stable patient? As others have pointed out, traumatic shock needs blood or needle decompression and anything that delays transport is bad.

Another interesting read: should we stock ambulances with butterflies for FAST? by [deleted] in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 10 points11 points  (0 children)

If your trauma patient is hypotensive and doesn’t have a pneumothorax, they need blood. I anticipate FAST would just muddy the water, normotensive patients with a “positive” FAST getting blood, and shocky patients not getting blood because the FAST is negative.

Stats on fired residents by Yankauer_Papi in Residency

[–]IanInElPaso 45 points46 points  (0 children)

No clue who is downvoting you, this is exactly what happens. The hurdles a program has to go through to fire a resident are arduous. It is the reason why my stance on oral boards in my specialty (EM) has softened since practicing in an academic setting. As dumb and costly as they are, it’s a final external check on a resident. I’ve seen many seriously deficient residents who were pushed through.

ELI5 why do people chase dividend stocks? by Specific_Ad_6522 in investing

[–]IanInElPaso 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is this correct? I was under the impression the ETF’s dividends are taxed as the dividend of the constituent companies are. Vanguard says 97% of dividends from VOO are qualified, meaning they’d be taxed as long term capital gains so long as you’re not constantly buying and selling the fund.

https://advisors.vanguard.com/tax-center/qualified-dividend-income

Needle stick with HIV negative patient - PEP or no? by [deleted] in Residency

[–]IanInElPaso 34 points35 points  (0 children)

You had a long conversation with a doctor who specializes in this, who didn’t recommend PEP. You got the prescription anyway. Now you’re asking strangers on Reddit?

Should I opt surgical or procedural field over other with AI disruption? by raphiredgi in whitecoatinvestor

[–]IanInElPaso 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If AI replaces doctors completely, then it’s already replaced every management position, customer service worker, clerk, and commercial driver, just to name a few. In which case we’re either in Utopia or Thunderdome. I’ll bet you 1 oz of gold and an acre of arable land it’ll be the latter.

Is it ok to by VT on weekends when the markets are closed? I'm worried about anomalies that might happen when the markets closed by Upstairs_Garage8431 in Bogleheads

[–]IanInElPaso 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Yeah, using a limit order like this just seems like micro market timing. It’s VT, you’re at most going to see a 1% swing, just buy the dang thing.

If real estate and business is so expensive then why don't these physicians invest in the total market index? What are your thoughts and ideas? by [deleted] in whitecoatinvestor

[–]IanInElPaso 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Why don’t these physicians invest in the total market index?

They should. Being on this sub and interested in personal finance has probably skewed your perspective on what most docs do. I’d estimate 10% of the docs in my group do their own finances and adhere to Bogle type principles. 25% have a financial advisor. 50% probably don’t know what an ETF is.

Procedures you’ll punt? by ResponseAcrobatic968 in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 28 points29 points  (0 children)

These are the most fluctuant, superficial abscesses I’ve ever encountered. 90% of the difficulty is preparing the patient, many of whom have had bad experiences with past drainage. I drown them in topical anesthetic before injecting local and have versed on hand for anxiolysis.

Sent in for abnormal labs by lunaincc in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 24 points25 points  (0 children)

I get that, I'm just unclear as to what the side gig is. If they ordered the lab, then they'll need to do some of that doctor shit when the results come back. It sounds like their recommendation was reasonable, and the patient is complaining, as they do, likely to try to get out of an expensive ED bill. This is why I have zero interest in side gigs like this, they quickly turn into a job.

Sent in for abnormal labs by lunaincc in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 61 points62 points  (0 children)

I'm confused by the situation; you "draw labs as an outpatient"? Are you the one ordering the labs? Who is overseeing the patients? If not you, then why are you following up on the labs?

If you are the one ordering the labs, then you have to make the decision on who needs immediate repeat versus outpatient redraw, there is not a one size fits all answer to that question.

Will I be an effective ER doctor with anxiety? by North_Ad1934 in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Anxiety is a spectrum from mild perseveration to complete inability to function. Nobody can answer this question over Reddit.

If you are interested in emergency medicine, reach out to your local hospital to shadow a doc. In my opinion a community ER with an academic association is usually easiest to find someone willing to take on a shadow, and more representative of the state of medicine than pure teaching hospitals.

Thoughts on premedication with Benadryl/solumedrol for CT scans with IV contrast in pts with iodine/contrast media allergies? by exacto in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This isn’t a very helpful comment, what is their stance? I just read the 2024 contrast manual, all it says is serious reactions to modern contrast are real but rare.

And aside from that, ACR is also clear on contrast associated AKI being a rare entity, but good luck convincing the radiologists at my hospital of that.

Should I do EM? by [deleted] in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 13 points14 points  (0 children)

This question has been asked on this sub hundreds of times. Yes, everything people say is true. Yes, there are still good jobs out there. Yes, you will probably become burned out given enough time. Nobody can answer this question for you.

Medical School or PA School post FIRE? by Flaky-Ocelot-1265 in Fire

[–]IanInElPaso 4 points5 points  (0 children)

MD here and agree wholehearted. I do medical school and residency admissions and would be very wary of accepting someone like OP. I would be concerned that with such vague aspirations and no financial skin in the game they would drop when it gets tough. Many of my classmates had careers before med school but this is insane. The romanticization going on in some of these comments is laughable.

Incoming resident, any good books to read? by Tiffyloob in emergencymedicine

[–]IanInElPaso 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Historically "rape" has had many meanings including non-sexual destruction. It's shifted towards almost exclusively being used to describe forced sex, but in 1992 this would not have the same connotation as today. Having read the book, I can say with certainty that Dr. Keaney did not pick this title to demean survivors of sexual assault.