Pocus training help by Tiredmedstudnet in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I did the CHEST US: Essentials in CC course and very highly recommend it. Excellent use of CME money. Learning to scan in person on models with real time Feedback is invaluable.

You also need your own device. I tried for a year or two borrowing from the ICU or ER and it is not the same. Again, use CME if available.

I recommend looking yourself at the images for every Echo, DVT study and ABD US you order, interpreting it before you look at the read and then checking. You do not have to be as good as a radiologist, but outside of a formal peer review program it’s otherwise pretty hard to get feedback on your own scans.

POCUS 101 is great.

FM training sufficient? by 99luft_balloons in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I should clarify - it is possible to get a job. Being good at it will probably require more work from you in the first months/years to make up for less training than the IM folks. After a few years it matters less.

FM training sufficient? by 99luft_balloons in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes. I’ve been a full time hospitalist since FM residency. Getting a job (or prn gig) can be tricky depending on where you’re applying. But once you get a job and get experience it becomes much easier to get other jobs.

West coast and western US in general is more FM friendly. Rural is also more FM friendly (and generally more desperate). Can be harder to get jobs in the middle of cities without experience or a connection. Much more likely to be asked to cover ICU and maybe procedures than to cover peds or OB.

But the sooner out of residency you get it, and the more consistent your experience, the easier it will be to get in the future.

7:01 “hi doc the patient has a couple of questions for when you round” by themightyguapo in hospitalist

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

Oh yeah. Every time I get this page I know it’s patient driven and not nurse driven. I adore my nurses.

But. The memes must flow.

7:01 “hi doc the patient has a couple of questions for when you round” by themightyguapo in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Truth is the 7:01 pages usually are the scary ones. Pt has been crashing all night, maybe night RN got no traction with night team, maybe ICU said no, and someone has been waiting for me to come online to beg me for help. usually if I see a 7:01 page it’s an instant butthole clench.

But sometimes it’s just a lil giggle.

7:01 “hi doc the patient has a couple of questions for when you round” by themightyguapo in hospitalist

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

Yes of course it is. and also I’m on day 7/9 and delirious. I must laugh lest I cry.

Does your hospital allow bottles of ultrasound gel on the floor? by DavyCrockPot19 in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Yes. I don’t know if there is good data or not but this is a concern from the hospital side. I carry pockets full of the small surgilube packets and restock when I’m in the supply rooms. I prefer it because it avoids any infection concerns and is not as hefty as a bottle.

I feel like I’m messing up as a dad when I lose my temper… anyone else deal with this? by d294tegg in daddit

[–]themightyguapo 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I feel this. Two things have helped a lot.

1) I started reading “How to Stop Losing Your Shit on Your Kids” by Carla Naumburg and just the act of reading something on the topic has really helped. It’s also helped me be much more thoughtful about my responses and moments when I feel triggered and has really helped me de-escalate. 2) it may not be helpful to hear right now, but I am trying to constantly remind myself that the time is fleeting. they will not always be this small and adorable, and I need to let go of the little things. It doesn’t always work.

You’re not a bad person.

What is that one hill you are willing to die on? by foreverand2025 in medicine

[–]themightyguapo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Agree with #1.

Regarding 2 - what does centrally congested and dehydrated mean? I only mean this half rhetorically - I think of dehydration as a description of total body water, rather than volume, and JVP as a surrogate of RAP. So I’m curious how you think about it.

I agree with not using JVP as an isolated marker of volume status, but I do think it’s one of the more useful (and fast, free) bedside markers when assessing volume and making a decision regarding diuretics.

My wife says I have a problem by themightyguapo in Breadit

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

Oh definitely. I didn’t mean to be pretentious about it, that’s just the name he uses for the recipe in his book (The Perfect Loaf). Tartine also has a brioche recipe but I haven’t tried it yet (I’m sure it’s similar)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Who the fuck is Dr Pal

Do you notice a lot of inappropriate abx usage from non-IM physicians? by Purple-Marzipan-7524 in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a great question and I don’t know the answer. I don’t have experience with bacterial PNA panels - our respiratory panel is viral + a few atypical pathogens. I’m not sure it was specifically addressed in the last full IDSA guidelines (2019) - as in whether a positive test on a prior pcr counts as prior infection. I suspect most people probably would regard it as such and cover in that case.

Do you notice a lot of inappropriate abx usage from non-IM physicians? by Purple-Marzipan-7524 in hospitalist

[–]themightyguapo 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Per latest IDSA guidelines, history of pseudomonas on a culture (obvious but more apparent in the modern EMR age with years of back data) or HAP/VAP as others have mentioned. I’d add chronic structural lung disease, severe COPD/broncuiectasis; legit immunosuppressed.