Here's a great blog post written by Edwin Leap MD, a doc who has been around the BLOGOSPHERE for years. He writes a blog at the Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/edwin-leap-md/
Here's the post about PTSD: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/edwin-leap-md/suffering-and-burnout-in-_b_8448704.html
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Monday, January 04, 2016
Wasting away in frequent flyerville
When you work in an ER for any length of time, you realize that there are a substantial group of people who you see on a regular basis. A few hundred actually. These we refer to as the dreaded "frequent flier".
Yes, these are the people who appear at the triage desk and you don't have to ask their names because you already know them. They are there so often that if you don't see for a couple of weeks you wonder if they died. You ask you co-worker if they have seen so and so lately.q
Yes, they sometimes come in weekly, even daily, sometime even 2 or 3 times in a day. There are some who come in only on weekends. They are the drunks, the migraineurs, the chronic painers, the depressed, the obsessive constipationists, etc etc etc.
Some of them, when you see their name on the triage screen, you want to run for the hills. Others, you think whatever... They are not the kind of people who get the concept of primary care. We are part of their life, the ER for them, is like you and I going to the grocery store. It's just routine.
We will keep seeing them, that won't change. The only thing that will stop them from coming is if they move away or die.
Sunday, January 03, 2016
Step away from the tylenol!
There have been a lot of advances, shall we say, in my ER since the dark ages when I started. We have a lab in the ER now. The techs draw the blood an do some of the blood tests. That's cool.
We now have a pharmacist. With the pharmacist comes the practice that EVERY med has to be approved by them before we can get it out of the million dollar drug dispensing machine. There are exception of course, many actually. Anything we would need right away, narcotics even. We can override the machine. Here'the thing: something like Tylenol can't be òverridden. Bacitracin (yes it's now in the machine - IT IS a drug you know) can't be overriden. So let me get this straight - I can take out ten pounds of dilaudid but I can't get a tylenol? OKAY THAT MAKES SENSE.....