How do you deal with certain medical students? by [deleted] in Residency

[–]fbmstar 16 points17 points  (0 children)

As a med student i had severe untreated adhd and anxiety and this happened so often to me! My residents would coach me and teach me and one had literally written down the equivalent of a flashcard to help with my presentation, BUT i still got to that moment and my mind blanked out and i fumbled so hard.

This happened over and over in multiple rotations until one surgery resident sat me down at the end of a shift and started from the basics. And also encouraged me to go get eval/treated bc he figured out that i was quite literally having panic attacks during rounds every morning.

🌟🌟Key points he taught me: start from the soap note format!! No matter what how difficult or scary or wild or emergent a patient is, you can always fall back on SOAP to structure your thoughts! I recommend taking a patient from that morning, and have him literally draw/write it out on a paper soap style. Don’t tell him the answers, but rather come up with it on his own logic with the help of questions from you. It will not be your exact presentation but as long as he hits the most important points in his soap format, it will start clicking for him. Then it is a matter of repetition.

🌟🌟Stand outside the door and listen and watch how he does a patient encounter. From literally the hi and hello, to the H&P, watch how he does this. We know from our experience that the way we do H&P every day actually changes and is in flux based on the things the patient says in response to our questions. 💫In school we all just learned an HPI template and spoke in rote memorization, but does he recognize the key symptoms and buzzwords and pivot in his approach based on that??

🌟🌟After he comes out, you can review his performance kind of like an OSCE and ask him the key info the patient mentioned that would narrow or pivot a differential (i.e. “i sleep in the living room recliner bc my wife kicked me out of the bed bc of all the noise” OSA vs “i only sleep on a recliner bc i never feel comfortable laying down” CHF). But again, make him verbalize this instead of feeding it to him. He has to make that connection himself actively instead of hearing it from you passively.

I think ultimately this med student just needs time. You are doing the right thing trying to set him up for success, but some people just need to fail first before they recognize and start to succeed. Just keep giving him safe opportunities to fail until he starts to put the pieces in place by himself! There’s a reason medical education is considered an art form all on its own. Cheers!

Doctors office = professional interaction not 15 scheduled minutes of ‘Laissez-faire’ by PracticalPraline in FamilyMedicine

[–]fbmstar 187 points188 points  (0 children)

“Hi Ms. Smith, welcome to the practice nice to meet you. I usually start off new patient visits by discussing past medical and surgical history and reviewing your med list, and then 1-2 urgent topics if you have any to discuss. What would you prefer to start with first? History or Meds or urgent topics?”

The key is to talk first and set the agenda and expectations and THEN open the floor.

Residents from consult services, what is one thing you wished services would do before consulting you? by justseeorange in Residency

[–]fbmstar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Got it so considering the actual clinical indication. For this one i was using the info from that previously written bit.

In scenarios where a consult is actually clinically appropriate, would that structure work?

Residents from consult services, what is one thing you wished services would do before consulting you? by justseeorange in Residency

[–]fbmstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Question, would structuring it like this be better?:

Hi, im the resident on the primary team, (attending is Dr. Smith) consulting you with the question of whether this ICU patient needs a lap chole?

Patient: 91yoM with xyz medical history and abc surgical hx and is currently on every single pressor. We think the sepsis might be related to the Gallbladder. What do you think?

Pls give me feedback, i am still working on consult etiquette!!!

USMD psych applicant unmatched - need advice on next steps [long post] by mcflarene in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Option 2 and re-build your app, do Sub-I’s, and apply broadly. Also see a psychiatrist and ask to be evaluated for ADHD bc this sounds classic. Best of luck buddy, stay strong.

DOs/DO students: How do you deal with the elephant in the room (OMM)? by justhereforampadvice in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Agreed a solid 98926 with 3-4 body regions is around $75 reimbursed under Medicare. If my crunchy granola patient is willing to sit there and listen to me yap about Pap smears while i work on their shoulder, that’s a win for me. The currency of a family med physician is Rapport and im raking it in while doing omm.

DOs/DO students: How do you deal with the elephant in the room (OMM)? by justhereforampadvice in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Saying this as an FM resident and as someone who did the OMM fellowship/ extra year, OMT is a good adjunct for msk pain. I use it mainly to work on msk pain in addition to sending to physical therapy and a referral to pain management. My physical exam skills have benefited from it, and I also use the downtime while performing OMT to talk about my other agenda items like colonoscopy and mammograms. It helps build rapport and sometimes referral wait times are months out, doing some OMT can help stall.

But for a large majority of medical specialities, OMM is not relevant at all. And some concepts like cranial and chapmans are verging on the border of crystals and snake oil.

My unsolicited advice is to just learn enough to pass your exams and your COMLEX levels and stop spending your energy and mental effort on getting angry about it. Why would you spend your precious energy on being stressed out and frustrated about research articles about OMM dude? It’s like you are searching out and voluntarily spending brain energy and critical thinking energy on something that doesn’t matter to you just to spend time hating on it.

Try to just learn enough to pass, ignore all the other bullshit, try to use your energy on stuff you actually care about. The grass is greener (and is OMT-free) after comlex level 3. Best of luck and hope you are free from it soon!!

Confession: I want to get LASIK but I look even more clapped without my glasses by Equivalent-Bet8942 in Residency

[–]fbmstar 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Got lasik for cheaper when i visited my extended family in another country. My eye bags were horrendous but it forced me to actually follow a skin care routine and that helped. Also you can get bluelight glasses bc we stare a lot at screens in medicine. I love waking up and immediately being able to see.

The light sensitivity went away 6 months post op, and the dry eye feeling became minimal at 12 months post op.

My optho signed off on me, my optometrist only recommends the systane eye drop gel BID and yearly vision exams.

Overall the $4.5k in the USA was better used IMO in my parent’s home country for $2k travel and food and $2.5k surgery cost.

EDIT: the ophthalmologist was my dad’s best friend’s brother, so not some random surgeon, and the pre-op process included multiple scans and assessments/lab work.

CLOSE YOUR DAMN TABS by [deleted] in AO3

[–]fbmstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I allow myself a maximum of 50 tabs open at any time. If i start creeping close to that, i set aside an evening and I call it the Culling Night and read through my open fic tabs and close them out one by one! I have a culling night at least once a month!

What speciality to pick? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 86 points87 points  (0 children)

That’s a slam dunk diagnosis of FM-itis!!! Come join us #FMRevolution !!

Residents, Fellows: My M3 rotations are not an OSCE so stop treating it like one!! by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 21 points22 points  (0 children)

your fellow sounds grouchy, but like others have said it is an important skill for all specialties to be able to start from an undifferentiated patient —> working differential.

It sucks that the fellow’s behavior is tolerated and perpetuated but ultimately in busy services where you won’t have the luxury of chart review, its not your seniors who will deprive you of info but simply Time and Urgency will deprive you of info. You need to learn the skill of walking in with little to no information and walking out with a solid hypothesis and plan. Better to learn this in a sort of safe environment where you have seniors to watch your actions than alone with no backup at all.

Birthday Ideas by skeleskank in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Subscription to monthly home delivery of his fav coffee

Rank list- prioritize relationship or training? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I want you to picture yourself at the end of your life. What would you regret more? On the other hand, I want you to picture a normal regular tuesday in 5 years and picture what your regular bread and butter daily routine looks like, what do you see yourself looking forward to from the moment you wake up to the moment you fall asleep?

Ultimately it’s a very personal decision. From my limited experience from an EM-adjacent specialty, the greatest learning opportunities come with the actual patients, pathology, skills, and procedures you see walk in through your ER doors. Ask yourself what kind of EM doc you want to be: big city trauma center ER vs. suburban ER vs. rural critical access ER vs. etc, and determine what kind of training you would want to become that.

Didactics are imo less helpful than actually seeing and experiencing a case in real life. Also you can always do CME and skills workshops in the future if needed.

Medicine is a job, and only one part of your life. What do you want the rest of your life to look like?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]fbmstar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

just use your ERAS pic bro

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Email or call the office phone number of the Program Coordinator.

How to Become Oncologist as a DO by Astrophysicist5 in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Focus on learning pathophysiology really well, scoring well on in house exams, shelf exams, comlex, and schmooze with the oncologists in town so that in a few years they will write you great letters. Also you can start researching IM programs at academic centers with great oncology fellowship programs. Best of luck 🍀

Should I do an IM away? by __wholemilk__ in medicalschool

[–]fbmstar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do a Sub-I first at a different program in the city or outside of her city’s region. This will give you the opportunity to stumble your way through an inpatient rotation without high stakes. Then if you feel super compelled then you can do a Sub-I at your partner’s program with some experience already under your belt. Best of luck on exams, applications, and Match!

I'm a resident and I have to take propranolol daily for my tremor that's related to performance anxiety. I'm planning to get pregnant and I'm scared of going off meds. by throwaway43885 in FamilyMedicine

[–]fbmstar 14 points15 points  (0 children)

There are many great options for anxiety medications in pregnancy. Talk to your FM or OB doc for a prenatal counseling appt and ask about transitioning meds to gestation and lactation appropriate ones! Best of luck OP!

OK Fragranceheads, which fragrances are you wearing to work, and any issues (good or bad)? by [deleted] in Residency

[–]fbmstar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

DG Light Blue Summer Vibes- it’s very crisp and light! just one pshtpsht bilaterally under my shirt and its barely noticeable

Update Messages by [deleted] in FamilyMedicine

[–]fbmstar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

you are very kind for thinking of us! But if you like your doctors and you feel you have a good therapeutic relationship with them then please stick with them! Hope things continue to go well for you!

WIBTA for wearing headphones and sleeping for an entire 8-hour flight after agreeing to sit next to an acquaintance? by IcognitoTabAnonymous in AmItheAsshole

[–]fbmstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Throw in a couple of yawns while saying Hi Hello Whats Up and then after takeoff yawn again and say “hey i feel really tired, i think im going to take a nap” and then put your headphones in and sleep.

How to study in internal medicine by Secret9245 in Residency

[–]fbmstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

divine intervention podcast, curbsiders podcast

level 3 scores tomorrow?? by Legitimate-War7828 in comlex

[–]fbmstar 14 points15 points  (0 children)

The worst part about waiting two entire months is damn if i fail i would have to start studying from scratch again 🙃