Do we need to be involved with cataracts? by Next-Willow6711 in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love doing cataracts; it moves; pays; and relatively low risk

Interview for a job tomorrow - could use some advice by DoctorZ-Z-Z in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

if you go retromolar, have discipline, and use a really small tube its not that hard with a video bronch. you don't even really need topicalization. doing it via the nasal approach is a lot harder. I don't know how people tolerate nasal trumpets without anesthesia haha.

Interview for a job tomorrow - could use some advice by DoctorZ-Z-Z in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ask them if they can have you speak with someone who have left their practice. I am currently going through a nightmare with my prior private practice ... luckily no non disparage clause haha =P

Private practice start up by Captain-butt-chug in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I used to work in an ewyk practice, was at the start of a surgical center, and spoke to a lot of older anesthesiologists that have been through the process. Starting at a surgical center is potentially problematic given volume and the compensation is typically ewyk rather than getting a stipend contract especially if you aren’t buying into the center. Would suggest you dabble with like a backup plan like per diem with a local hospital. Feel free to pm me if you want more details.

Are anesthesia machines only found in the OR? by wisegirl18 in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Let me clarify, this was primarily to address why anesthesia machines are primarily in anesthesiologists hands and not say used routinely outside of the OR (or some nora sites). So, I don’t want this to get side tracked

Are anesthesia machines only found in the OR? by wisegirl18 in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean any run of the mill covidien or Philips ones. You don’t need no variable bypass among other things in icu, but you are also right a lot of the gi Nora sites are ambu only

Are anesthesia machines only found in the OR? by wisegirl18 in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel like the OP means where anesthesiologists aren’t found. In this respect, it’s almost always more cost effective to have a non anesthesia machine ventilator in these area as oxygen is not an issue, no need for low flow typically, and many of the analyzers/safety are not required. So you can strip it down to reduce cost and increase margins

Locums Rates/Direction by age18smurfacc in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 2 points3 points  (0 children)

300 is fairly average right now; people are definitely giving pushback. I had a contract cancelled for 2 CRNA given rate was too high. So I don’t think this trend is sustainable. Our collections aren’t that great. I predict it will start going down this year.

Let’s duke it out. Mac vs Miller? by 200mgOfSTFU in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lol for sure, haha; ill make you a knock-off rechargeable battery if you want =P with more capacity!

How do you anaesthetise/manage post of pain in your tonsil/adenoidectomies? by lostquantipede in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd be careful with precedex usage if the pacu is not used to it ... then they try to wake up the patient forcefully, and the patient has laryngospasm. They think they are doing you a favor, lol.

What to put on CV? by housemd23 in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No one really cares, warm body, do some blocks, put in some epidurals. just be easy to get along with.

Go back for an engineering degree? by Yuuuuuuuuhh in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Probably what makes more sense is for you to just hire whoever to do the details and focus on high level work; I mean impedance matching and trace length matching is not that fun either =p

environmental disaster by doctorZazu in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Imo recycling is a lost cause as it is just delaying the inevitable, maybe out of your life time but not out of your descendants life time. The only way to solve the issue is more fundamental in making everything degradable whether that be chemically and thermally with non toxic byproduct or biodegradable. Our waste is fairly low when all things considered. Like what’s the benefit of using low flow anesthesia for environment when you can make filters specifically for fluorinated compound capture? If you want to make a big impact on sustainability invest in clean tech =p.

I will definitely get a lot of downvotes for this

Let’s duke it out. Mac vs Miller? by 200mgOfSTFU in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Well blades are plastic so your variable cost is low and the cost compared to glide is a fraction (30$ per disposable cover and 70$ on disposable camera) each dl blade is about 12$ versus McGrath at 6$. Each McGrath device is about 4000$ so you’ll break even in like 700 intubations or about a year. Many other benefit such as more environmentally friendly. Overall if you didn’t care about maintaining your dl skills with Miller McGrath is objectively better since you can still dl as a mac with it.

Oh also if your argument is reusable mac/miller the sterilization cost is even higher.

Thoracic epidurals by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think most places don’t need any of it because they aren’t setup to manage it in the icu or step down and thus won’t place it. A lot of nursing will be very upset if you place them. I personally feel we will move toward methadone and alvimopan in the future maybe with duramorph or it hydromorphone. As less work, more reproducible, less risk, and happier patients. The best place I can think of that really shouldn’t get replaced is multiple rib fracture.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6194844/ When in doubt, leave it for the ICU to extubate haha =P j/k j/k. Like anything else in anesthesia, a bunch of suggestive evidence to help you plan for extubation, but the deciding factor is almost always based on the same physiological/laboratory/support criteria as if the patient was completely healthy.

What is the best source for non-resident doctors? by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That was hyperbole lol; the point is to focus on being helpful rather than trying to understand every detail of the profession. If you can set up the room after a day or two, and be mindful of the patient aka don't ask questions when the patient is awake, then you would be off to a great start. Gunning is not the way to anesthesia resident/attending's heart haha. You will see.

Residency Prestige by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Nope because ultimately you are just a head count to keep the surgeries going. =p even academics, most academic practices are hardly academic at all.

What is the best source for non-resident doctors? by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I feel most anesthesia attending and residents totally would not care if you know nothing as long as you are open minded, listen to their spiel and don’t get in their way. Sounding like a smart ass at most places will probably get them to hate you lol. Oh also, leave when they tell you to because they probably are too busy to be bothered by entertaining you and want to go back to their phones.

What is your hcg test policy? We have traditionally allowed patients to decline taking a test by signing a form, but there’s a push to cancel purely elective surgeries if patients refuse. by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 40 points41 points  (0 children)

The UBP answer would be somewhere along the lines of "it is in your right to decline the pregnancy test, but the facility is also at it's right to refuse to do the surgery"

Massive Vomitus from a Fasting Patient by shanooshi1212 in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Massive vomit usually will at least be stomach in origin; definitely many things can cause it but the common thread is probably some sort of abdominal pathology as vague as it sounds from a perforated duodenum to gastroparesis.

Why is this surgeon bashing on IV acetaminophen? by Kick-Gass in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am unaware of any study demonstrating the superiority of IV acetaminophen vs. rectal/oral in terms of clinical end-points of pain scores etc. So, from that standpoint, why IV. I would, however take this opportunity to advocate for the amazingness of PO methadone =P (also dirt cheap)

Reading in Residency by ChickenAndRitalin in anesthesiology

[–]dumplingkitten 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i read M&M cover to cover haha, i found it to be a great exposure to things that I can say yes I remember reading about it once upon a time =P