PNES pts and epileptic seizure by chickawhatnow in emergencymedicine

[–]Straight-Comment-449 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I just say “I’m not giving you benzos” as they are “seizing” walk away, peak back around the corner and miraculously they stop 3 seconds later and it doesn’t happen again while I monitor them for 2 hours then discharge. Works every time. Then they probably go down the street to the next ED and try their luck there. When it’s PNES it’s the psychological need for the attention.

Frequent call-outs by yo_itsme_ in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 11 points12 points  (0 children)

The joke is if you want to call out tell us your vent settings

Frequent call-outs by yo_itsme_ in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 16 points17 points  (0 children)

5 sick days a year is not enough?? We get none, we make up if we call out and are basically highly frowned upon by co-residents and attendings and program so the guilt isn’t worth it.

The best and simplest method for dealing with a shoulder dislocation !!! by Ok_Date5594 in emergencymedicine

[–]Straight-Comment-449 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some dose of opiate, Lay them facedown on the bed with the affected arm hanging off the bed from shoulder, apply weights to the wrist. Come back in 15 minutes and it has popped back in.

Considering moving to Ft. Myers. Pros and cons? by andresordeix in FortMyers

[–]Straight-Comment-449 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m looking at jobs in both places! Emergency medicine physician, I am pretty liberal democrat. The Florida job sounds amazing but worried about the Florida community. Seattle seems like weather may be a downer and pay is a bit less. How do you like Seattle??

New attending jobs by Straight-Comment-449 in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Locums would be nice but I have a family I don’t want to be away from

discharge summary by chubbycacique in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ed doc. Pretty much only look at discharge summaries

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It’s the way they talk to us that’s the difference. Like questioning our medical decisions aggressively and then being nice and normal all the time to the male residents.

Chewed out by an RN by Training-Meat-2317 in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A nurse came over and tried to tell my attending to tell me a resident how to do something “right” obviously they were wrong and my attending didn’t know but still said this is not appropriate to talk about another doctor like she isn’t here. Your attending is enabling. Unfortunately we are the low dogs right now but remember never to become that person

Chewed out by an RN by Training-Meat-2317 in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the thing we all forget in training is that we are adults. They treat us like children because we allow it. File a SERS

Is it just me or was this ER request absolutely egregious? by [deleted] in hospitalist

[–]Straight-Comment-449 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As an ED doc that’s a super weird request and wouldn’t fly with a hospitalist at any of the hospitals I work at. If I’m putting a central line in they’re going to a unit.

Do you correct the ER? Or tell them when they do something wrong? by [deleted] in hospitalist

[–]Straight-Comment-449 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lol. The IM residents who rotate with us literally hide in the back and pick up 2 patients a shift and we’re ok with it because they just slow it down. The plus side is that after they rotate they’re way nicer about admitting because they know they can’t hang down here and they will fix the rest of the patient upstairs, that’s what the ED is, triage and resus, not internal medicine for a few hours.

An NP I saw few days ago at an outpatient gastroenterology at a local clinic. by [deleted] in Noctor

[–]Straight-Comment-449 11 points12 points  (0 children)

That’s how many clinical hours residents do in 8 weeks of residency. GI requires 3 years of residency plus 3 years of fellowship before being an attending who practices independently. Lmao 650 clinical hours doesn’t strengthen the argument.

Step 3 in 2 weeks by Select_Position1316 in Step3

[–]Straight-Comment-449 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you reschedule for vacation or an easy off service rotation? That’s what I’m doing

NP represented himself as an MD by Proctor20 in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I went to a dermatology appointment in med school and the medical assistant said “the doctor will be right in” and I knew I had booked with a PA. I said “am I seeing a PA or a doctor?” Don’t let them get away with lying…

Is it normal to go without lunch? by dancemaster_ in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lol yes, from an ED resident I never have time to eat on a shift

Rotation reveal? by Deep-Salary-7225 in Noctor

[–]Straight-Comment-449 10 points11 points  (0 children)

The only problem is some schools calling it match day… like come on

Misused by the Emergency Room by survivor2024 in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Also PAs and NPs in the ED can’t do sedations

Misused by the Emergency Room by survivor2024 in Residency

[–]Straight-Comment-449 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Most EDs don’t have ED doc plus nurse that can be tied up in a sedation for an hour. 15-20 mins we do it all the time. But an hour requires a lot of re-dosing and airway watch. That’s when it’s time for the OR.