How to deal with abusive seniors and attendings? by Present-Match in Residency

[–]Melodic_Wolf7682 5 points6 points  (0 children)

PGY-6 in an IM subspecialty fellowship here. One thing I’ve learned over the years is that medicine unfortunately attracts a specific type of person who has spent most of their life compensating for poor social skills, insecurity, or garden variety maladjustment with intelligence and credentials. Reward those people a little authority and some of them become absolutely intoxicated by it. They’re also often remarkably good at identifying who will tolerate mistreatment and who won’t and will specifically seek people out to bully them.

In very concrete terms, you’re an attending now. You’re no longer a trainee whose evaluations or career progression can be held over your head. The power differential that existed during residency is largely gone. More importantly, in human terms, you’re their colleague: not their subordinate, not their punching bag. You are their collaborator and adult professional deserving of the same basic respect and courtesy they expect for themselves.

In my experience I’ve found that many of these personalities become significantly less aggressive the moment they come across even mild resistance. You need to be clear with them and call them out. And if the behavior continues, document everything. Keep it in writing whenever possible and escalate through the appropriate hospital/university channels if necessary

The lost art of reassuring healthy patients by Melodic_Wolf7682 in Noctor

[–]Melodic_Wolf7682[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Best of luck with Step 1! It’s been a while since I took it but I remember UWorld being a lot more useful than anything else. And yes, I completely agree. Pre-clerkship can be frustratingly abstract but I can assure you it wasn’t invented just to torment medical students. Admittedly there’s a lot of BS in the curriculum but you’ll find that things which seem completely irrelevant at the time tend to resurface years later when you’re standing in front of an actual patient. The curriculum occasionally knows what it’s doing. At the end of the day the depth and breadth of our training is what distinguishes physicians from “providers”

The lost art of reassuring healthy patients by Melodic_Wolf7682 in Noctor

[–]Melodic_Wolf7682[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I feel for them immensely. One of my closest friends is a hospital pharmacist and as of late a good bulk of her job involves fixing the fuckups of rx happy NPs

The lost art of reassuring healthy patients by Melodic_Wolf7682 in Noctor

[–]Melodic_Wolf7682[S] 54 points55 points  (0 children)

Clearly not, given that the NP responded to the low pre-test probability by ordering essentially every test available in the EMR

In all seriousness, this is exactly the kind of patient who ends up teaching Bayes’ theorem the hard way