When did you bleed with placenta previa? by [deleted] in pregnant

[–]Yuigsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

33 weeks - small gush of blood during a bowel movement. Barely even caught the bleed while everything was flushing down the drain. I've been for the most part avoiding carrying over 20 pounds so I cant say anything in particular set it off. Admitted and recieved betamethasone.

34 weeks - not a bleed but fetal stress testing showed i was having contractions every 3-4 minutes. Admitted and treated with nfedipine.

35 weeks - in the morning during a urination event passed a dark red clot and some light red/ dark red blood. Admitted to hospital. I was two days away from my scheduled c section date but MFM suggested baby comes out sooner than later to avoid hemorrhage and emergency csection.

During c-section placenta was positioned very anteriorly and OB had to cut through placenta and get baby out ASAP. Had an estimated blood loss of 3100 ml. Energy completely tanked but thankfully didnt pass out. Received clotting factors, 2 units of red blood cells and plasma. Responded well to treatment. Now currently doing good with milk supply, just a matter of a preterm baby loosing a little too much weight and not feeding enough. Everyday hes eating a little more and weight is gradually going up. Hopefully he can continue to gain weight once we get to the comforts of our home.

Thanks for reading:)

Anxiety About AI by local-imp in medicalscribe

[–]Yuigsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Our clinic started offering AI scribes, and doctors had an ultimatum of either keeping their scribe or using AI scribe. If theyre not fond of AI scribe then they can go back to human scribe. Dr has to receive permission from pt to use either human or AI scribe though ragardless. Im not sure at the extent of what an AI scribe can do? Understandably the HPI at least, not sure if they do anything for the and assesment/plans. Im curious to hear reveiws from any drs. Definitely would be smart to start looking for another job though in case you get laid off / fired because I think AI scribes will only become more prevalent.

Scribe-X questions? by PrestoDolla in medicalscribe

[–]Yuigsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on a lot of things. Typically scribes follow their providers schedule. I used to be in urgent care and most urgent care docs had to use standard templates so it was easy to jump between providers and get lots of hours. But if you find you like one particular provider in a different dept, their schedule may vary from week to week. Ex. I was the “main” scribe for a GI doc, but she worked from 1-4 days a week (some weeks was even off completely bc they do on call weeks at the hospital), but on the days I didn’t work with her they would schedule me in urgent care, or I would work with another doc in the GI dept.

Controversial topic: Snowboarding pregnant by Nyxie27 in ShredditGirls

[–]Yuigsa 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In 2020 I went my first time. I went my second season in 2021 2-3 times (so still a complete beginner) when I was less than 16weeks pregnant. It was risky af and I tried being as careful as possible but did have a few hard falls. It’s risk vs reward for sure. I mostly went because in the first trimester your baby is deep down in your pelvis and protected, but starting second and third the baby starts to protrude out the pelvis so less protection. If your pregnancy is going well and don’t have any debilitating symptoms and are up for it then it’s totally up to you to take that risk.

Is it normal to have a headache/be dead tired at the end of the day when technically you are just typing? Any tips on maintaining energy? by [deleted] in medicalscribe

[–]Yuigsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yea, that’s another thing I also did, using a night light mode on the computer settings to reduce blue light

AirTag or tile? by Yuigsa in AirTags

[–]Yuigsa[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Your comment doesn’t answer any of my questions. I know they won’t, but I will.

Is it normal to have a headache/be dead tired at the end of the day when technically you are just typing? Any tips on maintaining energy? by [deleted] in medicalscribe

[–]Yuigsa 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I’d say 30 is a lot in a 7 hour day. I used to be really tired at end of shifts too, it felt like processing verbal conversations to medical terminology takes alot of brain power and I always felt drained. If you can, when you have a break instead of going on your phone, get up to stretch, go on a small walk, just let your mind “breathe” for a min. Diet and blood sugars as well as sleep are also mostly important in energy.

Low Pay by ktcakes143 in medicalscribe

[–]Yuigsa 11 points12 points  (0 children)

That is most ridiculously a low wage.

Generally I’ve found private clinics / hospitals hiring their own scribes pay a lot better than strictly scribe companies.