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@surgerysenor
I'm taking it!
âI just finished medical school. Â Now Iâm heading to residency, which is supposed to be even tougher. Â Iâve been working sixteen-hour days. Â Then Iâm expected to study every night when I get home. Â Some of my classmates only sleep three hours per night. Â I tried that for a few months during my surgery rotation, but I ended up getting really depressed. Â I felt completely depersonalized. Â Everything seemed like a dream. Â To make matters worse, a lot of the instructors are jerks. Â I think they went through hell when they were students, so they feel like they should put us through hell. Â On the first day of rotations, my attending physician told me: âIâm an asshole, but Iâll make you a better doctor.â Â He made fun of me in front of other students. Â He put me down in front of patients. Â Heâd threaten to kick me out every day. Â I guess theyâre trying to weed people out and make strong doctors. Â But theyâre just traumatizing people. Â Theyâre making us apathetic. Â I got into medicine because I really wanted to make a difference in peopleâs lives. Â But after going through hell, I just donât care anymore.â
I thought when I got to medical school things would be easier. Not that the work wouldnât be hard, but that a little bit of the pressure would be removed. After all, itâs pass/fail, and as everyone says, âonce youâre in, youâre inâ.
Midway through second year, my mental health has never been worse. I go to a school that is relatively supportive, with classmates who are, on the whole, genuinely kind people. I havenât even made it to the wards yet, but I still feel beaten down. Iâm tired. Iâm sick of being constantly examined and nitpicked, of unclear expectations, of what sometimes feels like superhuman demands, of being told to do more âself careâ when I donât have time to take care of myself.
My advisor is kind and well meaning. She says things will get better third year when Iâm not stuck in the classroom all the time, but she also reminds me that things are only going to get harder when I get to residency. She says this in the context of wanting me to get my mental health issues taken care of now, which is totally valid, but itâs also devastating to hear that this is not as bad as it gets.Â
No one feels bad for medical students or doctors, not really. The conversation is mostly about how we get paid too much, or how our lack of sleep puts patients at risk, or how something got missed because we just didnât empathize enough with or listen to our patient. Sometimes it feels like no one cares if our quality of life sucks as long as itâs not affecting patient care. âWe knew what we were getting intoâ, and we get paid too much for anyone to feel sorry for us.Â
Thatâs fine, I get it. Weâre in the business of caring for people. We really are, in so many ways, privileged beyond belief. I got into medicine because I genuinely, truly wanted to help people. I wanted to be the âgood doctorâ that can empathize, that can really listen to and hear their patients. I wanted to give of myself every day. I wanted to be part of the solution, to fix âthe systemâ. I wanted the ability to eliminate some of the pain and suffering in the world because I had watched my family suffer greatly due to the imperfection and limitations of medicine.Â
Now I just feel tired, and broken, and sad all of the time. I feel deep regret for all of the life Iâve missed out on in the pursuit of medicine. All the sacrifices I made just to get here donât feel worth it.Â
Iâm trying to get all of the help I can for the despair that I feel. Iâm trying to get better at self care. Iâm trying to be more resilient. Iâm trying. There are some days when I feel like a worthless pile of crap for not being able to rise to the occasion, but I also have to think that, in spite of all the reiterations of how I need to take better care of myself, maybe Iâm not the problem.
Friend, you are not the problem.
âI feel deep regret for all of the life Iâve missed out on in the pursuit of medicine.â
I love medicine and what we are privileged to do, but same. We are not the problem. Iâve started making better choices for myself as a third year, and realizing itâs ok for medicine to not be my entire life, but itâs so hard to find balance.Â
This is so sad to read, not because this person is hurting because sadly that is normal. Itâs terrible because of the sad truth written here. I remember having graduated nursing school and having already written my registration exams. I sat on our couch, looked at my husband and said âwhat am I supposed to be doing nowâ. I had spent so much time pursuing my education that I didnât know how to have a life. Medical students have so many more years of this than nursing students do. This was 27yrs ago and it is so much more intense today. We leave our studies and come out into the world with such idealism. We want to be empathetic and giving of ourselves but the system has become about âcustomer serviceâ and not about making people well. Which hospital or LTC facility has the best rankings for its âhotel like atmosphereâ. This was not what any of us signed up for and itâs hard to process it emotionally and mentally. Add in the death and tragedy we see daily and many medical personnel are now the biggest sufferers of PTSD. We the people working within the system are not the problem, we are not perfect nor are we free of mistakes. We are just people of flesh and blood who are trying to make a difference in peoples lives.
Thereâs like..whole doctor forums that cover stuff like this. Outside of medblr or tumblr. Out on SDN (which is partly why itâs such a dark place). A lot of premeds, a lot of them, start off with this ideal or dream of what medicine is. Itâs like saying, be careful what you wish for, it just might come true. By the time many realize hey, this is not what I signed up for. This is not for me. Or less extreme, this is not what I thought. Youâre straddled with debt. Youâre stuck in this culture and system that expects you to not have a life. The workload is such you barely have time to think sometimes. I go to the toilet just once and the pager will go off, over and over and then I come out and everyone is like where did you go? Families have trouble accepting i have to go home eventually, I get it - your loved one is in hospital thatâs a huge deal. The expectation is that I sacrifice my own time for them. You canât get out. You canât complain. Itâs too competitive. itâs become this over glorified thing thatâs become this marketable product. itâs one of the most prestigious programs a university could have and one of the most expensive degrees. Itâs in a way, oversaturated in that itâs robbed of us ârightsâ.Â
Then you just do what you can to survive.Â
Thereâs nothing right about crippling debts and a system that not only traps you economically but robs you of a meaningful life outside this career. You become a slave to this machine. And weâre taught (no one directly says this, but we tacitly systemically accept this) that to not go with the flow of things as it is, weâre somehow weak.Â
I donât recommend this career.Â
partly itâs that thereâs almost too much interest in it, people spend 3 years on average just to get into one. Thatâs 3 years of your young life and you havenât even started medicine.Â
I especially donât recommend it to anyone with anxiety or depression or mental health issues. Not that I think theyâre incapable, to the contrary we need more people who understand what itâs like to suffer from a medical or psychiatric condition. Itâs just that the system will never offer any reprieve, and if anything destroy what resilience they have. itâs not just that it happens in medical, it gets worse in residency. Medical school is only the beginning. Things are always at an extreme in this line of work, and things get both better and so much worse as you go up in training. there is perfect job or balance, not in medicine.Â
And despite everyone asking about it a lot during med school, there is no work life balance. Maybe in family medicine or GP. But itâs a huge misconception otherwise. itâs just do what you can when you can, and you will barely have time to see family. I live my husband and there will be periods where we donât physically see each other for a week because our schedules donât match. itâs not even a question of theyâre sleeping so we canât interact. Theyâre not home at all when Iâm home. And vice versa.Â
There are great parts to this career, it goes without saying. But far more people are aware of its attractions than its realities or are so idealistic they donât want to see the downsides of which there are many.Â
Anyway posting it for the premedblrs and medblrs who leave the field. It is not a loss nor is it a tragedy to not get into a career in medicine. There are many similar and just as rewarding careers that will allow you to have space and time to have a life outside of work.Â
âNew options for minimally invasive surgeryâ
Me: âIâm here to check your vital signsâ Pt: âwhat are you going to do if you donât find any?â Me: âchest compressionsâ
as a society we have to start bullying rich ivy league kids more. theyâre like âi go to harvardâ and you gotta be like âwhat? never heard of itâ
i got a lot of shit about this post a few days ago but ever since that scandal broke? crickets
This was already funny without the translation, but now that I understand itâs even funnier
Relevant question.
My partner Evanâs third year of residency completed his trajectory toward what is commonly called âburnout.â Two out of the 10 residents in his class left the program. In an already understaffed department, the remaining residents picked up the slack, taking extra call and working longer days. The general misery index among his cohort skyrocketed.
âNo matter the specifics, the officially-endorsed solution to unwellness is always: âDo more.â But do more is literally the last advice anyone should be giving residents. Adding commitments to a residentâs calendar will never be the answer.â
The second installation of the âResident Wellness is a Lieâ series by residency program director Jennifer R. Bernstein, published on in-House, the online peer-reviewed publication for residents & fellows.
http://in-housestaff.org/resident-wellness-is-a-lie-part-2-1354
This. So much this.
Most bang-for-buck things every intern should know before starting inpatient wards
Source. A collection of Meddit resources and advice on what bread-and-butter topics interns would most benefit from brushing up on/memorizing prior to the beginning of their internship. 1) Fluids. How and when to use them, dosage, timing and other pearls.
Review of fluids (not how to use them per se) by Dr. Strong /u/ericstrong
Maintenance Intravenous Fluids in Acutely Ill Patients - NEJM.
Pretty thorough review of fluid management on openanesthesia.org
2) Nausea. When to treat, how to treat and at what dose.
3) Standard pn orders: pain killers, sleep aids and antiemetics aka how to reduce nighttime calls from nurses by 25%
4) âReflexâ antibiotic choice for routine inpatient infections.
http://www.bpac.org.nz/Supplement/2013/July/antibiotics-guide.aspx /u/ChristianM and /u/ive_been_up_allnight
5) Initial work-up and treatment of dyspnea. (more realistic to approach by symptoms as, unfortunately, you first have to diagnose whats wrong. E.g. heart failure, pulmonary edema, embolism, COPD, pneumonia).
6) Initial work-up and treatment of oliguria/anuria.
7) A sensible initial approach to suspected ileus.
8) Blood. When, how, why to replace.
9) Pain. Optimal management without inducing narcosis.
Managing cancer pain: Frequently asked questions: CCJM
10) Potassium. When, why and how to shift or replace.
A review on both potassium and sodium disorders by Dr. Strong /u/ericstrong (Not reposted in 12) hyponatremia but applies there as well) https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYojB5NEEakXVIAapcSEleP4doUdHVtld
11) Hyponatremia. Most common electrolyte disturbance, commonly mismanaged.
12) Resuscitation aka commit the ACLS algorithms to memory.
Current ACLS guidelines. https://www.acls.net/aclsalg.htm
Would love a video series, interactive cases etc.
13) Basic EKG interpretation.
Whole EKG video courses
A whole free youtube EKG video review course by medditâs own u/ericstrong
An alternative EKG course that takes you through all the basics. This however has no free version and costs 96$ a year. The quality is amazing. Here are 6 basic sample videos on youtube. The paid course is available on http://www.ecgteacher.com/
I have to admit I havenât used this course personally but his free youtube videos are on-point and he seems like a good teacher. Also behind paywall. Free youtube samples are here. The full course can be found here https://www.ecgacademy.com.
EKG video cases
Amazing case-of-the-week emergency medicine EKG videos on youtube by Dr. Amal Mattu
â If you like Dr. Mattuâs cases (and you most certainly will) he is still posting every single week on his new site https://ecgweekly.com. It costs 4 starbucks coffees a year and is going to save someones life.
Practice EKGs with answers
Watching videos isnât enough, you still have to grind out EKGs to keep your game strong. Visit http://ecgmadesimple.com and http://ecg.bidmc.harvard.edu/maven/mavenmain.asp for this.
EKG blogs
I recommend signing up for some kind of RSS feed (e.g. https://feedly.com/) and subscribing to the following EKG blogs:
http://hqmeded-ecg.blogspot.is (Dr. Smiths ECG blog)
http://www.ems12lead.com
http://ecg-interpretation.blogspot.is
http://jhcedecg.blogspot.is
EKG resource libraries
Life in the fastlane has a nice resource to look up a specific EKG finding, criteria or concept.
http://www.practicalclinicalskills.com/ekg.aspx /u/collidge
14) Know when to order ABGs and how to interpret them.
Almost too detailed video lecture series on ABGs and how to interpret them by Dr. Eric Strong (/u/ericstrong)
Practice makes perfect. ABG interpretation generator. https://abg.ninja/abg
Bonus 15) Basic CXR interpretation
CXR video lecture course
Again, Dr. Eric Strong has an excellent video course for free on youtube
Step-by-step guides to basic CXR interpretation
The Radiology Assistant: Chest X-ray - Basic interpretation
Radiology Masterclass step-by-step basic CXR
University of Virginiaâs step-by-step basic CXR
All inclusive resources
The art and science of thoracic imaging All inclusive resource for all things thoracic! Jokes aside amazing resource.
UPenns CXR learning website
Loyola Universities excellent CXR Atlas Most outdated look but amazing content.
Checklist approach to CXR
Bonus 16) Overnight o-shit-whatâs-that Head CT interpretation
Midnight radiology: Emergency CT of the head
University of Virginiaâs guide to the Head CT
Hey, self: review before NCLEX. Xo, me.
Oh hell yes
For future reference.
Must. Study.
Scheduled to post right before intern year starts. Gulp.
Reblog to save a life. You got this, bbs.
we need it all
reblogging this for my future self. you welcome.
Things I routinely forget and scramble to relearn.
On Grief
As healthcare professionals, we have the unique privilege of meeting many people throughout our careers, often at extremely vulnerable times in their lives. Some of these times are vulnerable in happiness, but more often they are vulnerable in pain, suffering, and grief.
Loss is something that every human experiences at some point in their lives. It is as ubiquitous as it is inescapable. Every day, there is a person in the world who loses a loved one.
Over the weekend, we lost one of our chronic PICU patients, mere days before her first birthday. This sweet, lovely baby girl was always a joy to visit on my days in the PICU, and even when she spent some time on our chronic complex ward I would swing by to see her before I headed home.
When you lose a patient, you are allowed to feel the grief. You are allowed to mourn. There will always be this cloying feeling of not enough that sticks to the back of your throat, but the loss that you feel is testament that your memory of them is enough. The weight in your gut is the imprint they left on your soul and it is not a symbol of failure but rather a reminder that you knew them, you cared, and that was enough.
You may not have done everything perfectly when you were taking care of them, but their mark on you should not bring you shame. It should bring you determination to care even more deeply for every patient you encounter. You will still make mistakes (you are human). Your contribution to your patientsâ lives is how you made them feel, not how many answers you got correct. When they were in pain, you did your best to comfort them; sometimes, that meant that all you could do was hold their hand so they knew they were not alone. When they were sad, you listened to them and you held their stories in your heart. And now that they are gone, you will hold their memory as a part of you forever.
It's time to stop the victim shaming...and call it like it is.
A hundred times yes. Stop telling doctors that burnout is their fault. It IS victim blaming.
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Another installment of: Not My Business
LMFAOOOO
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