Friday, September 21, 2012

For my dad...


It was a night where I worked at a hospital that our group contracts care with. Rural, with mostly patients that are simple enough- sprinkled with those that are seriously hurt or sick. There are the  ones the medics bring to us to do the best we can before we ship them off to our accepting hospital. This, however, does not happen that often.

It’s one doc and one mid-level. I am new- not very comfortable with medicine yet, but patients remain the same to me...I do this because I actually do appreciate the real trust they put into us. My curve is steep, my heart thuds every time I see someone that my “oh shit” bell goes off. 

Tonight, this sort of patient stepped into Trauma Bay A. She was young, 60, and was just returning from a vacation with her family. 

At a rest stop, she had a syncopal episode. She was brought to us to get “checked out”. Normally, this is easy enough. There were some abnormalities on her exam, plus some concerning lab changes. Decision was to admit her to our accepting hospital. A last test had to be done- the medics had been called to transfer her to our regional hospital. 

Off to CT. She had an episode of angina, but nothing that nitro did not fix. She got back to us, and as I was helping our nursing staff get her onto her stretcher, she became limp, and unresponsive. 

The code began. I was working with a young, impressive, compassionate doctor that evening, who ran that code calmly, with great finesse. Every procedure was accomplished first pass- intubation was complete within 60 sec with RSI in place, chest compressions began right away. We had a few moments where we thought we might have her.  More epi, a femoral line, fluids full on, everything was done.

She had driven home from the family reunion with her sister. Her husband had left an hour or so earlier with their dog.  They made it to the middle of the state, about half way home when this happened. The calls were made to her husband; he turned around and tried to get to her quickly.  

My job at that moment became to get the rest of the unit to run- despite what was happening in Trauma A, there were 16 other patients that needed to be seen- several with chest pain, shortness of breath themselves. My horror and concern was pushed back- my job was to get the patients seen,  test ordered, and interpreted, successfully treated, and correct disposition, be it an admit or discharge. 

I spent as much time as I could with the family between patients,  trying to explain what was happening. Is there anything worse than knowing that you will never see your life mate again?  I knew that this man would never hold his wife again, never be able to look into her eyes or hold her in his arms. And I think he knew it too.

There is a look that a human has, it’s haunting. When they look into you, past your defenses, past your medical training, and into your heart, asking for you to tell them the truth. Its raw, and when you feel it, you know, you know that this person deserves your most honest, trained, truest self. At that point, I could not answer him with words, but only could hold him as he trembled and cried. 

She had had several episodes during the vacation that were concerning to him- he was beating himself up that he had not made her get checked out. He told me about these, told me how she loved their dog, and how he loved her  inbetween clinging onto me, sobbing. 

The staff worked for well over an hour on this young patient. To no avail.  

After an hour, the time of death was called. Nothing could have been done for her...all of that medicine, training, and collective wisdom left us with just our hearts raw, and damaged, all of us aching for this woman and her family. 

I walked out of the hospital that night with the family who were beginning to gather. I met the grandkids, the family dog. The shock had not set in. 

I got into my car, drove for a few miles and pulled over. And then, finally, miles away, allowed the night to pour over me.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Getting comfortable in the 40's

Wait...I am way past the 40's...

(humor me please!)

I feel fairly comfortable in our fast track area. I am far from good, but not horrible. I am getting my charts done, and signed fairly quickly. It's all good. Now, to get better in the 1-50ish areas.

My norm has been- oh- 8-10 pts a day in the higher acuity areas. I think I have aggravated more than a few docs along the way- my desire to ask questions about cases may actually be construed as my not wanting to do the work. This is FAR from the case, but now, a month or so in to being a "real" PA, I can see how it might look.  I just want to make sure that I am doing okay, that my thinking is correct. I am still developing my clinical thinking, which is quite different than boards, or being a student. Each doc has "their way" and clearly it's not standard. That is what makes it the art of medicine.

I am still choosing my brushes and paints.

Today was a good day. I saw in excess of 13, and did a fairly good job of managing them. I had the AM with a doc that is really good, and my first time working with him. By the end of the day we had the dance down well, and I learned a lot...a ton, really.

The 2nd doc I worked with was one I have known and I have wondered about their feelings about me as a PA. Happened to be one that I spent a lot of time with initially when I was Oh-So-New and still very wet behind the ears.  Today went much better-thankfully.

I had pulled the chart- syncope. Should be okay enough. This was a pt who is not from our area. He was here in town on business, and it happened to involve hospital care, as well as litigation.

This was one very healthy male patient, with no- and I mean NO PMH at all. I had the A team.  I had the great  attending doc to guide my medical decisions. I had the hospitalists on board, and a very intelligent patient to boot. Informed, and kind, with a great smile, and wonderful attitude.  Several things have to be ruled out, and it went thru it's systematic process. All looked okay.

I spoke to him at length about my concerns, and worries. This was a very healthy man with zero risk factors except travel and it was a short trip from home to the mountains. No matter, Men that are healthy do not just fall down with out some reason. In the end, he headed back to his home town and his family doc. I worry, of course, but I know that he is a smart guy.

In the end, as I handed him his test results, he hugged me, and told me that I had been "just wonderful" and he was so grateful that he had met me.

That right there is why I do this job.  I have had 2 days that have reaffirmed why I have taken this path. And I am so very very grateful....

Sunday, September 9, 2012

OOh kay...

Well, its been a crazy long time since I have updated anything on the blogs. I have 3 going right now, which is a bit extreme. Foxview will no longer be active, which is okay. It actually fits well right now.

I am indeed now an actual PA-C in NC. I am currently doing ED medicine- although if I said I was confortable in that role, I would be lying thru my teeth. I am not yet- FastTrack is getting better, but oh boy, do I get scared of things that really I should feel okay about when in the other areas...I do know, but still freeze. The Docs I work with are for the greater part amazing and supportive.

My last shift was really tough.. long long code, and the doc was tireless, and calm and wonderful about the entire thing. I was truly impressed by how he handled everything. Inspired even. Very grateful.

I have had several shifts where I have felt that I might have made the wrong decision and direction for my career. This was the boost that I needed right then.

I really enjoy the patients. Some are...tough. If you want pain meds, and are going to start telling me the "story", if I start yawning, I know pretty much you're not really concerned about the pain as much as the pain medication.  It's something I figured out I do with those sorts of patients. I fear that I might lose the sharpness that I need to miss the "oh f*(& what do I need to worry about in this presentation?" with those sorts of patients. As the adage goes, even crazy (or pill-addicted) patients get sick. Those are the tough ones.

I had a patient last week that really concerned me. I presented him to the MD and he was convinced that it was viral. I remained really concerned for some reason. This is the first patient that I ever called back after an ED visit. I called him at home the next day, he was up, had showered, and very thankful that I called. I reiterated again that he needed to come back into the ED if he began to feel worse. I signed his chart the other day, and looked him up. He came back 4 days later, and was admitted for CAP. I know that I did what I could, but still, was worried about him at the time and remained concerned, and I guess I need to develop and listen to that voice. The MD that admitted him is an excellent MD, and I know she gave him great care. That makes it better, but lord. Scary.

As far as the house goes, I have not done much really... learned how to mow- and how to A) break the zero turn, and B) get it stuck. Talent, I tell you! Talent!

Friday, June 8, 2012

Day 2 Cadaver Lab

Who would have thought that I'd be kind of excited at doing a cadaver lab? Well, I guess most of my PA friends would think this...and therefore, know that, yup, this was exciting.

One of the worst parts about learning about medicine is that we often do things on patients for the first time. They might not know this, but I'd expect that they usually experience more pain because of someone doing something for the first time on them. I have been on the receiving end of a "first time" and I can tell you this much. No fun. Not one bit.


So, if someone says..."hey, try this Chest tube, this IJ, this SC, this intubation, this retro-intubation, this IO access, this cut-down, this femoral cut down, this femoral access, this thoracostomy this decompression, this cricothyrotomy" and it's not going to hurt any patient? I am ALL about it.


We are all listening carefully!






 There were 3 bodies which meant 5 to a body. Quite generous. I learned that there are 2 sorts of bodies- fixed and unfixed. We were working on unfixed bodies. This means a lot of great things like organs are pretty much exactly as you'd expect, and there is no real "rigor" that has set in.
                                            
And we did every one of those things above mentioned things today. Packed a few noses, did a few digital blocks, a few arthrocentesis and thoracentesis. They then did a demo of cracking a chest, and we were able to feel the aorta, as well as the heart and other organs. While this is not done often anymore (nope, not Greys Anatomy in real life!) it remains something that might be done as a "you have no other choice" thing.

Okay, so certain things are tough to do when there is no blood flow, but it is, after all, about proper technique and they made sure we were doing it right.

I know it's not 'tea life' but it's a lot closer than I have gotten. This learning is FUN. A lot of fun.

Afterwards, we had a dinner in the conference room, the stinky, smelly bunch of us.

The food here has been great! They correctly assumed that we would not like an "out" dinner but would prefer an take out kind of dinner. Perfect!
Doesn't Jamie look GREAT in this yellow hat?

I then went to everyones favorite store with a new found friend and got yet even more poison ivy stuff.

Day 2 AM

This AM was our Ultrasound workshop.  Truly a terrific experience. I had done a sort of FAST exam at school, I now know I was doing most of it wrong. And honestly, did I even actually SEE anything when I did them before? Eh, probably not.

Clearly not. (Is US ever really clear???) No, I think not. But now I have a few more things I can add.

There were pearls galore. Again, while I think I learned a lot, I won't actually know until I hear it some place later and can pull it into my brain to utilize in practice.

So, our US lecture was...amazing, What a great learning experience it was.

Yes, I am over my head. I just graduated...but what I do know is when someone can teach. These people can really teach and enjoy teaching. Patient? Kind? all in huge measure.

So a few pearls....again, I am positive I am not getting all of them in, but that's just how it is. The immense amount of information is just that.


  • US is pattern recognition and therefore, practice makes perfect.
  • US answers specific questions
  • Hi freq=Higher resolution
  • Lo freq = increased tissue penetration
  • Buttons? Don't let 'em scare you. In the ED you don't need most of them
  • Make sure you have the right probe and the right setting
  • Look for your indicator- your probe should be in line with that. Usually, indicator towards head, or pt right side. Only exception is when you're doing an IJ (or at the head of the bed)
  • BART for flow. Don't assume that blue is venus ever.
  • Full bladder? Acoustic window. Sound transmits better.
  • Shadow artifact? Can be helpful  or "really make you angry!"
  • Stones have an initial shadow maybe, but when you fan or move the probe, there is no longer a shadow
  • "Getting good images is the first step for getting good info!"
  • FAST Exam answers 4 questions
    • pneumothorax
    • hematoperineum
    • hemothorax
    • pericardial effusion
  • Most important question answered is "WHY IS MY PATIENT IN SHOCK?"
  • Anything other than an extended FAST is an incomplete FAST
  • FAST is part of the primary survey. It is nothing more, and nothing less. 


This is our first station this AM- US guide for CL placement. Terrible picture of a great station. Now I want to use US for everything.

This is also a horrid picture, but what used to just be grey lines is now beginning to make some semblance of sense to me. Maybe...


A few minutes after lunch, one of us decided the sun was just too warm and nice to not take advantage!
Truly, our fearless leader, doing the mandatory safety lecture before cadaver lab.














Before cadaver lab. Everyone still looks fresh, and still smells GREAT!

Day 2

This am was different ultrasound techniques and pearls. We again were divided into groups of 3, and rotated thru 5 stations.

Again, I feel I got a great natural progression, starting with vascular access and then seeing gallbladder, aorta, renal, and finishing trans-vaginal.

I never thought that I'd be fascinated by ultrasound... Always thought it was a bunch of grey lines. But- truly impressive when you get a glimmer of understanding.

More later! Off to cadaver lab!

Sent from my iPhone
http://foxview-farm.blogspot.com