This seems like a very low bar.
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RMH
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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Janaina Medeiros
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YOU ARE THE REASON

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@bondi-st-blues
This seems like a very low bar.
3 top Benefits to having terminated a successful therapy? I literally just walked out of her office for good and can't stop crying because I'm so sad I won't see her again, I need help formulating the good side to all this
in my opinion, the top 3 benefits of terminating successful therapy are:
1. it means that you met your primary therapy goals! so things have changed in your life, and for the better.Â
2. not only have you met those goals, you are at a point where you are able to put the new things youâve learned into practice without needing ongoing assistance from your therapist anymore. basically- youâve made huge progress.
3. you now know what itâs like to engage in successful therapy & connect with a great therapist. that means that if you ever need therapy again, youâll be really well equipped to find a great therapist & achieve your new therapy goals.Â
and an extra- feeling sad about terminating therapy is normal. itâs like ending any other important relationship or experience. itâs hard to go through it, but the sadness tells you how important and impactful your therapy and your relationship with your therapist was.Â
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Yes I did reblog 4 times in succession because people need to understand this concept.
I was wondering if you could elaborate on the biases toward patients with opioid addiction and what you think we should do better. I see a lot of infective endocarditis patients, and it's frustrating and sad and I know I'm guilty of biases.
@runner-kat, this is an EXCELLENT question.Â
Let me make one thing clear: I am no saint. I did not come out of life or medical training aware or âwokeâ about this issue. I learned, as my hero and inspiration for this blog, Anthony Bourdain did when he acknowledged his contribution to toxic masculine kitchen culture: by fucking up, listening to people who knew better than me (patients themselves, social workers, addiction psychiatrists, my attendings, residents), changing my ways, and continuing to learn. If I can change, you can, too.Â
I think there are two very major, pervasive biases I see across disciplines and healthcare professions that can also be easily remedied.Â
Common bias #1: Language What we do: âThis is a 28 year old heroin addictâ âThis is a 32 year old IV drug userâ âThis is a 48 year old opioid abuserâ
Addict, user, and abuser are words with blatant value judgement behind them. It changes the way we think about the patient before we even see them. It hurts our patients, too. We as physician know better, we know that illness does not make a patient more or less valuable as a person.Â
We KNOW that addiction is a physiologic illness. Itâs not âall in your headâ or âweak willâ or âpoor upbringingâ. One that comes with stigma, its symptoms manifest as behaviors, its side effects and endpoints catastrophic to patients, families, children, and communities. One of the saddest things I heard in the past year was when a twenty four year old with terrible septic arthritis told me, âIâm a drug abuser. I donât deserve this surgery, you guys should just leave me to die.â It told me how little she thought of herself and how hopeless she felt. It told me that someone who claimed they loved her said that to her. Thatâs fucked up. Use instead: âThis is a 28 year old with heroin use disorderâ âThis is a 32 year old person who injects drugsâ âThis is a 48 year old person with opioid use disorderâ This is non-judgmental language that succinctly addresses the medical illness of the patient at hand. Disorder, of course, in the medical sense, and not the colloquial sense. Common bias #2: Patients with a history of or current usage of opioids do not provide learning value.What we do: Residents. Attendings. Med students. Raise your hand if youâve ever heard or said: âUgh, another opioid user youâre going to learn nothingâ or âI prioritize teaching on my service, so youâre not gonna get the annoying stuff like placements or drug users.â
Iâve said all those things before. Iâm not proud of it. I donât say shit like that anymore. And I educate residents to not say that, either.Â
There is teaching and learning value so long as you look. But why do we say shit like this? Because weâre burnt out and patients with opioid use disorders need a LOT of multidisciplinary services, time, and help we often cannot give as a lone med student or resident. Their suffering and sometimes their behavior forces us to confront things about ourselves, our healthcare system, our society that weâd rather look away from. These patients can also often press our buttons and stir up emotions that weâd rather not feel and can test our compassion.Â
Let me offer some suggestions for teaching points for both teachers and learners:
-Ask your patients about the first time they injected or took more pills or fentanyl patches. The stories will break your heart. The number of patients Iâve met who were given an injection against their will? Too many. Patients who took pills because they felt their life and future was going nowhere? Too many as well. -Learning about injection habits and learning how to educate people on safer injection habits if theyâre not ready to stop to prevent life-threatening infections is seriously interesting and lifesaving medical education. Maybe Iâll do a post someday soon.-Learning about medication-assisted treatment (MAT) to help patients ready to stop using opioids. Interesting and educational from a pharmacologic perspective, physiologic, and medically. Attendings out there, find out if you can get certified to provide MAT! Iâm in the process of certifying!-**Framing injection drug use as a medical condition with its own focused review of systems, questions, physical exam, and work-up. Ask about fevers, night sweats, systemic symptoms. Injection methods: you must ask because it will address where infection lies on your differential and what else you need to work-up. Ask about prior methods the patient has tried to stop injecting. Have they tried quitting cold turkey, tried methadone, suboxone, vivitrol, etc. What were those experiences like? What have they heard? Would they like to try? Looking for back pain (potentially a concern for an epidural abscess or vertebral osteomyelitis), a good MSK exam for septic arthritis or muscle abscesses, murmurs for endocarditis, etc. Work-up for transmissible diseases like HIV, Hep C, blood cultures for bacterial or fungal bloodstream infections. Do I have your interest yet?
Obviously thereâs more to do. But I think if medicine as a whole could do just these two things, weâll be doing a whole lot better.
Fantastic question, thank you!!
md-a
i urge you to seek comfort in the fact that everything in the universe is subtly interconnected. it didnât work out the way you wanted it to but youâll end up where you need to be. keep your head up.
Watch: Complaining about political correctness says more about you than it does others.
god
animal rights activists need to learn that cows moo for other reasons than âmissing their babiesâ
you canât just go on a farm, hear a cow bellowing, and assume itâs for her calf. thatâs stupid.
When I lived right next to some cows they got a new one and she spent about two days mooing because she was in a new place and then she was fine.
My friend lived on a farm where the cows would all line up against the one fence to moo at the house every morning. Why? They liked the rottweiler that lived there. The cows would moo like crazy, the dog would go trotting out, theyâd all sniff at each other, then head out into the pasture for their day. Theyâd moo for their morning dog fix. đ
whenever i would go visit my grandmothers house the cows would line up and moo because there was a weird car in the driveway. then when they saw it was just the grandkids they would stop and go back to their buisness
wait cows moo in specific situations? i thought they just made sounds Because They Could
They have many different moos for many different situations tbh
Daisy Ridley and her friends during London Pride 2019
âWhy you always got your guard up, huh? Have I ever hurt you? No, you havenât, because my guard is always up.â Little (2019)
on my bus ride home (iâm going home for passover) there was a lil old orthodox jewish man and his DOG had a kippah and tallis!!! so i asked where he got kippot for dogs, and he was like âi ordered it online!! itâs her 13th birthday so weâre throwing her a Bark Mitzvah!!!â
:â))))
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