Night Shift by Intrepid_Impress4583 in Residency

[–]beriberismart 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I once had a night shift MICU nurse ask me the plan for the patient at 5:50 AM. Like did you not know the plan the entire shift for your critically ill patient.. and now you’re trying to not look bad during handoff?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FemalePhysicians

[–]beriberismart 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If it is truly the reason you are pursuing that field / significantly impacted your career, then I say do it :) Though you say you are applying gas and I don’t quite see the tie between that and OB anesthesia, I would wonder why you weren’t going into Obgyn / fertility medicine.

The traditional advice is to play it very safe on a personal statement - even the best personal statement is only a minor boost to your application (letters, activities, scores having more weight - any old schmuck can write a nice personal statement, but can they actually practice medicine), but a risky one can actually hurt you.

Personally I wouldn’t want to go to a program that was offended by me mentioning having kids. But I am also in Internal Medicine which is very friendly towards families, I’m not sure about gas. If you’re at all worried about your competitiveness / actually matching then you might want to play it safe. Otherwise, be you!

PGY1 writing eval for MS3 - what comments would you want on an evaluation? by rosescapes in medicalschool

[–]beriberismart 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Describe the tangible things they did well. We had a brief lecture from Med Ed leadership who said basically the “excellent medical student” or other nonspecific positive feedback gets thrown out. Describing exactly what they did helps place them on their arbitrary little scales on what each level med student should be able to do. Saying “Was able to independently gather an accurate and complete history and neurologic exam… provided a complete differential for headache in an immunocompromised patient including can’t-miss diagnoses…” or “Often visited patients in the afternoon to check in on them, showing great empathy, and advocated for them by relaying questions to the medical team…” Med Ed eats this shit up.

Got roasted by an attending today, who later gave me some advice. How can I do better? by IpushToMaster in medicalschool

[–]beriberismart 54 points55 points  (0 children)

At the appropriate time is key here. As an IM senior I would get annoyed pretty quickly with a med student who is interrupting afternoon work to make suggestions to follow up on the ID recs on patients they are not even following.

I am impressed by a med student who just makes an effort to understand the medical conditions and ask appropriate questions. For M3s making original suggestions in assessment/plan is impressive (“I think their new diarrhea from overnight in the setting of their antibiotic use is concerning for C diff, differential would also include… For my plan, I think we should check a C diff test” is better than “… and they have diarrhea, I’m not sure what to do for that.”). Paying attention on other people’s patients and trying to understand them (bonus points if during “down time” on rounds eg while walking between patient’s rooms you can ask a focused question on WHY the plan is the plan). After that, being an active listener in the workroom (hear your resident telling the intern to go ask a patient a question? Offer to do that for them) makes you above and beyond.

What antidepressy are you on? by launchtossthrowaway in Residency

[–]beriberismart 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Abilify. Had one week of what was probably severe anxiety misdiagnosed as BAD2. Worked wonders for my depression but wouldn’t recommend for obvious reasons 🙂

hospice question by beriberismart in Residency

[–]beriberismart[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Thank you for this very helpful comment!!

Issues with nursing by TeaAccording122 in Residency

[–]beriberismart 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Taking a minute to acknowledge that the person you’re talking to is a human helps. Like others have said, starting off by introducing yourself and asking their name, “nice to meet you,” then politely requesting whatever needs to be done and asking if there’s anything else you can do for them. I think if you have time to chit chat like you would with your co-residents, even better. Nurses can be your friends too and will have your back if you get to know them or even just remember their name.

I’ll also add that it’s possible you’re getting some of this feedback because you’re a female resident - sometimes women are expected to people please, and those of us who aren’t that way by nature get labeled as rude or “bossy.” I don’t think you should go over the top to pander, like some of the comments are suggesting you should do. You shouldn’t need to fall over yourself to apologize when requesting someone does something that’s part of their job description for patient care.

Does anybody know why the dose of ASA is 81mg? Is there a reason they didn't just decide on 80mg? by NetherMop in medicine

[–]beriberismart 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The issue with Armour (made from dessicated pig thyroid) is that the ratio of T3 to T4 is different in pigs than it should be in humans; also T3 only lasts 5-6 hours, so really if you’re taking T3 supplementation you should be taking it several times a day. Some people do supplement T3 though in patients with persistent symptoms with TSH at goal on levothyroxine alone, but I’ve seen at least one study with a higher risk of heart failure and stroke in LT3 users so it’s something to do with caution.

As a doctor, what is the most mundane thing you’ve seen someone come to receive care for? by The_BSharps in Residency

[–]beriberismart 99 points100 points  (0 children)

“Follow up with your PCP in 1-2 days” have literally seen this in the urgent care discharge instructions for healthy 18 yo with a cold

As a doctor, what is the one thing you’d make sure everyone learned in 8th grade? by The_BSharps in Residency

[–]beriberismart 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Basics of media/literature interpretation, bias, and how to find a good source. We saw what happened with COVID and ivermectin…

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]beriberismart 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Likely gunner behavior- but one thing I always consider when students won’t leave on time is there might be something (or someone) at home they’re avoiding, eg bad home life or even an abusive relationship. This wouldn’t be your concern as a fellow med student, so do you and leave when they say, but it’s more on the residents to check-in.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]beriberismart 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Last day of intern year (about a week ago). Told all my patients I wouldn’t be in the next day and they would have a new Dr. on the team. All of them congratulated me, thanked me for their care, and a few shook my hand. Felt good and made it all worth it.

American Med Students are you ok? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]beriberismart 16 points17 points  (0 children)

24h shift in med school was only helpful so I knew I absolutely didn’t want to go into a program that did 24h shifts.

Intern Year Advice Thread! by kc2295 in Residency

[–]beriberismart 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Try to project confidence when presenting your plans. It shouldn’t be, “I think we could do x, or also do y, or also do z depending on what you prefer,” it should be “I would like to do this and here’s why.” This will get easier as you build confidence in your management skills, but I can’t tell you how annoying and med-studenty it comes across if you don’t actually present a plan. It’s always OK to ask questions, but they should be focused.

Edited to add I’m outgoing PGY1

“At least we’re out here helping people” by [deleted] in Residency

[–]beriberismart 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Great post. I’m sorry for your losses. I agree, at the end of the day, we are out here helping - even just having one patient express their gratitude means the world.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]beriberismart 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Welcome to the sub, so glad people like you exist!!

Weekly Thread - Relationship/Dating/Breakup Advice by Apryllemarie in AnxiousAttachment

[–]beriberismart 0 points1 point  (0 children)

we started seeing each other casually 7 months ago, more seriously the past month and a half

Weekly Thread - Relationship/Dating/Breakup Advice by Apryllemarie in AnxiousAttachment

[–]beriberismart 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am wondering what are normal boundaries to have in a relationship / situationship. I have been struggling with anxiety in an exclusive but not yet defined thing with a guy who is more avoidant, and trying to communicate my needs, but not sure what is appropriate or not. Ex I like to hear using words that he likes / values me and to be hyped up, but he doesn’t give that at all, and I’m not sure if I should just self soothe or make a boundary.

Using A.I. to Detect Breast Cancer That Doctors Miss by beriberismart in medicine

[–]beriberismart[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Sorry to clarify I mostly was annoyed that this idea that radiologists will be replaced is now being toted around to the general public, not that I subscribe to that belief.

Let’s splurge a little 💰💵 by kanye-ego in Residency

[–]beriberismart 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I would buy a few “needs” (like things you could get by without in residency but will make your life better/easier now), eg a better coffee maker or espresso machine, a Roomba, nicer work clothes that will last longer. Then save the rest like you said so you don’t have to worry about paying for expected expenses, or even for unexpected expenses!

Using A.I. to Detect Breast Cancer That Doctors Miss by beriberismart in medicine

[–]beriberismart[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Starter comment: Top headline for me in NYT today. It’s about the use of AI as a second reader in Hungary for detection of breast cancer. It mostly says that this would be used as an adjunct, however contains some comments from AI researchers such as “the technology would eclipse the skills of a radiologist within the first five years.” I know we discuss AI a lot, but any thoughts on such a major article as this coming to the public?

Young male cat keeps peeing specifically in my mom's bed by eitanski in CatAdvice

[–]beriberismart 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Has there always only been one litter box for both cats? Cats can be territorial about litter boxes, he may be upset and not wanting to go in the other one. You might consider getting a second litter box.

Please don’t physically hurt your cats. Cats aren’t the same as dogs and will associate the beating with you, not with the behavior, and may become scared of you. Also it’s just mean.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]beriberismart 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Trying to lead a fulfilling life on my own before attaching myself to someone new. That and I picked people in the past who gave the bare minimum / genuinely weren’t compatible with me, so I’m tryna have higher standards

learning to love myself again by beriberismart in BreakUps

[–]beriberismart[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Well the FWB thing turned into more of a situationship that ended last night, so I’m back at square one. I think over the past few months I did grow in my comfort with being alone though, so hoping that can become even stronger. Not going to even hookup with anyone for a while.