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Newsletter:
Keep up-to-date with the latest medical news stories with the New Media Medicine Newsletter.
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Weblogs
Welcome to the Medical Blogs (Weblogs) section of New Media Medicine. Here you can read about Medical Students, Medical School Applicants and Doctors who have kept an online diary, or 'blog' of their medical experiences.
Anyone can start a blog. It's very simple and free. Just register for the site and start a 'new thread' here in the weblogs forum.
08-04-2008, 09:39 PM
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#41 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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Have the BBC Missed The Point?
This story appeared quietly and with little fuss over the weekend. Afterall, unless its about £100,000 salaries or patients dying, nobody seems to care what happens to doctors.
The BBC story highlights an important point, although I can't credit the BBC as the remark originally came from a professor at the Royal College of Physicians. With the complete introduction of the European Working Time Directive (EWTD) from 2009, all professions, including doctors will be limited to working 48hours a week down from the current 56 hour limit. Now I don't know about other professions but this has some pretty serious consequences for doctors and perhaps more so for patients.
The BBC article states that patient care will suffer because there will be less staff available, this clearly makes sense as if all doctors are working 48 hours rather than 56 each doctor is working 8 hours less. Who is going to cover those lost hours? Patients are still going to get ill 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Who is going to be there when Mr Jones arrests but Drs Smith, Brown and Wood have all worked their 48 hours this week? Of course, everyone knows that the vast majority of doctors are still going to work more than 48 hours a week, they just won't get paid for it as it is effectively 'illegal'. When it comes to auditing hours, these doctors will be 'encouraged' to lie about their hours to make the trust EWTD compliant. So patient care probably will suffer in the short term, but Dr Smith and his colleagues won't leave Mr Jones to die, they will ignore the EWTD, safe in the knowledge that what they are doing is illegal and they're not getting paid for it. Another solution to this problem is the use of night nurse practitioners and such like. I'm sure Dr Crippen wouldn't approve and to be honest, I know who I'd rather be looked after in the middle of the night during an emergency.
Anyway, I think the BBC have missed the point, it isn't the short term, immediate care of patients which is at risk. I'm far more worried about the implications for the future in terms of training. Talk to a doctor who qualified 5, 10, 20, 30 years ago and they'll tell you about the 'good times', the 100-120 hour weeks, the 48 hour shifts without sleep. Strangely, most of them will tell you they enjoyed it in a sadistic kind of way. Not because they get a kick out of working more hours than there are in a week, but because of the experience they gained. Most doctors will tell you that on call, during the night is where they learnt the most.
Lets consider for a second Mr Bone, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon. He became a consultant within about 11 years of graduating from medical school. When he qualified, he worked 100 hour weeks as a house officer and similarly throughout his training. That is about 50,000 hours or so of training.
Next, lets consider me (or equally one of my colleagues) who, having studied a PBL course doesn't know all that much to start with. If I were to become an orthopaedic surgeon about 11 years after qualifying having worked no more than 48 hours a week. I would have received about 25,000 hours of training. About half that of today's consultants. It certainly won't be considered acceptable to double the length of time it takes to become a consultant and so we're left with one scenario.
In 10, 15, 20 years time, the 'consultant led' NHS is going to be staffed by doctors with roughly half the amount of training their predecessors had.
Who would you want to replace your hip?
Leave a comment and read other posts here:
http://imamedicalstudentgetmeoutofhere.blogspot.com/
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10-04-2008, 12:51 PM
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#42 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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A Revelation
Two Things
a) This article doesn't surprise me, especially the bit at the bottom: "Medical students formed the largest group of complainants "
More importantly
b) How, after almost 5 years did I not know about The Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education ("OIA")? An independent complaints board. Something else to add to the list of things to do after finals!
read other posts or comment here:
http://imamedicalstudentgetmeoutofhere.blogspot.com/
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13-04-2008, 01:48 PM
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#43 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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If you knew then what you know now...
A topic came up over lunch the other day which I think sums up quite well just how low morale is among medical students and junior doctors at the moment.
The question was: knowing what you know now, would you apply to medical school again? The answer from 3 out of 4 of us was a fairly firm no, surprisingly I was the only one who probably would apply again albeit to completely different medical schools.
I opened this topic up to a wider audience and was pleased to see that not everyone had lost faith in medicine. It was also interesting to note that among those who would apply again, many would have applied to different places for a variety of reasons.
So...
Whatever stage you're at, be it 1st year student or consultant (not that any consultants are likely to be reading this), if you were applying to university today, knowing what you know now, would you choose medicine again?
Answers here please: http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blo...4&isPopup=true
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16-04-2008, 11:35 AM
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#44 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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Univeristy Says No
Yesterday we began a series of 'safe prescribing' lectures, there is the potential for a station in our OSCE on prescribing but I think these lectures are more aimed towards making us safer doctors. It is a shame that these lectures are starting 3 weeks before finals, it would have been much more useful to have them regularly throughout the year or even the whole 5 years. It was fairly basic stuff and it would have been better had there been slightly more pharmacology involved.
That said, the lectures were quite useful but it was the other things I learnt which I found most interesting. We asked why these sessions had been left so late, after all we've better things to be concentrating on at the moment. The answer was most enlightening.
It seems that they have had some trouble putting on these sessions, and others like them. In fact, we learnt that in previous years, one of the surgeons had offered teaching sessions throughout the year on things he thought were lacking in our course, suturing for example. Unfortunately for the students, the university had contacted the surgeon in question and ordered him to stop giving the sessions as it would be unfair on students at other hospitals. (For those of you who don't know, the 3 clinical years of our course are spent at 1 of 4 teaching hospitals in the region). Let me get this straight, the university had told staff at this hospital, not to teach us topics where there might be gaps in our knowledge? I was flabbergast, I really hope I've misunderstood something here because as far as I can see the university are actively withdrawing learning opportunities! Perhaps they're right, maybe it isn't fair on students at other hospitals, but that is the university's problem, it shouldn't prevent people from offering to teach! The university should be doing everything it can to ensure everybody gets these opportunities, not preventing them! It must be virtually impossible to prevent this kind of teaching at all 4 hospitals, so I'm sure somewhere some students are going to be getting something that other students are missing out on.
Why don't they just lock us all in a room for 5 years with some textbooks? God forbid we might actually be taught something!
What sort of institution is this and what sort of doctors is it trying to produce?
Leave a comment here: http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blo...4&isPopup=true
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19-04-2008, 04:09 PM
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#45 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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The Final Push
A month from now it'll all be over one way or another. 3 more weeks until exams, I'm ridiculously fed up of waiting for them. I can't wait till there over and I can spend my time doing bugger all/playing computer games/sleeping or a combination of the 3.
4 more weeks and medical school is over. Shitters
Also want to take this opportunity to say hi to the people who've been reading through most of my archive. Some of you seem to have spent a hours reading, considering exam time is approaching, I'm guessing you're all procrastinating!
Finally is anyone else having problems with blogger emails? I'm not getting messages about comments and other various emails.
Leave a comment here: http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blo...2&isPopup=true
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22-04-2008, 09:50 PM
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#46 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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A Momentous Occasion
Today was a momentous occasion in terms of my career as a medical student. I have been counting down to today for the past 8 weeks at least! In fact, it was a cause for celebration for at least 8 of us, although only 4 bothered to turn up. Have you guessed yet? Today was my last ever PBL session, the last 2 hours of problem based learning I'll hopefully ever have to endure (at least as a student).
I was going to bring cake, and even champagne to celebrate the occasion but I'm not sure hospital is the best place for alcohol and I couldn't find any suitable cakes. As it turned out, only 4 of us turned up anyway, quite sad really that final session was more of a damp squib than anything else, not that PBL is much more than that in the first place.
The session itself was more a small tutorial than a classical PBL, saying that, we've not done 'textbook' PBL for years. I'm just happy I never have to waste 2 more hours of my life sat in a room trying to teach each other medicine from the titbits of knowledge we've all cobbled together from various sources. It is quite ironic that such emphasis is placed on group learning and PBL, where we're encouraged to help each other to learn, only to be examined and assessed against each other when it comes to exams and ultimately ranked against each other when it comes to job applications. I can't quite understand that logic.
I must have done a couple of hundred hours of PBL in the last 5 years and I can probably count on one hand the number of useful sessions. I can't even remember how PBL is supposed to be done, it is that long since we followed the proper steps. I'm still very much of the opinion that PBL doesn't work as an exclusive method of teaching medical students. I think there are huge gaps in some of our knowledge, some of us more than others of course. Sadly too much time, effort and money has been put into developing such a course that even if those that be wanted to revert to a more traditional style, it would be far from easy.
Who knows, perhaps in a few years I'll be proved wrong and it'll be the PBL trained doctors leading the way, unfortunately I just can't see it happening that way. I expect that once more evidence becomes available, PBL will be shown to be the pointless, farcical waste of money that it is.
In the mean time, I'll rest safe in the knowledge that the words "time for PBHell" will never again cross my lips!
HELL YEAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
leave a comment here: http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blo...9&isPopup=true
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23-04-2008, 08:46 PM
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#47 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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A Dream Becomes Reality - But Not In A Good Way
How many people have dreamt about being a hero at the scene of an accident? For the majority it will remain just a dream, one in which they are cool, calm, confident and heroic. For others, this dream becomes real, but the reality of the situation is somewhat different to the heroic dream.
This afternoon we went for a drive in the countryside, the sun was shining and we were merrily winding our way around the country roads. Up ahead, over the brow of a hill I noticed an accident, it soon became clear that it was quite serious. There was a distinct lack of emergency services, I was faced with a decision, should I stop or carry on? Despite having little to offer I decided to stop, I pulled over, just beyond the accident. My heart began to race, I hadn't paid much attention to the scene as I was pulling over so I didn't really know how serious things were. The accident had obviously happened barely a minute before we passed and a couple of other people were already on the phone to the emergency services.
As I approached, I realised this wasn't just a shunt, it was a high speed, head-on collision involving two cars (car 1 with one man in, car 2 with two women). Metalwork was strewn across the carriageway and the cars were in quite a state. I approached what I initially thought was a police woman talking to an obviously distraught and injured passenger. I introduced myself as a final year medical student and asked if there was anything I could do. It wasn't until afterwards that I realised that she was just a smartly dressed passer-by.
As a final year medical student I've not exactly got a wealth of experience of medicine, let alone in pre-hospital care. I'm not afraid to admit that I was terrified, realistically, what could I do? No experience, no equipment, no nice doctor telling me exactly what to do, absolutely no idea what I was doing. Not only that, all my brain could think was "Oh SHIT!" So not exactly the cool, calm, confident hero?! I went to the driver's window of car 2, the driver was slumped, she was barely breathing. I tried to introduce myself but she was barely, if at all conscious. The only thing I could think of was ABC (Airway + c-spine, Breathing, Circulation), she was obviously trapped and severely injured, I tried to assess her pulse, I couldn't convince myself that she even had one. I tried the back door so I could get in to stabilise her head and neck but it was stuck. I was focused on trying to assess ABC it wasn't till later that I noticed (actually missbliss pointed it out) her other arm was broken so badly it was bent in 3 places. Eventually a policeman who'd arrived managed to get into the back and to stabilise her head, but by this point she looked terribly grey. I'm no expert, I'm not even a novice, but something inside me thought she was probably exsanguinating internally.
By this point the only emergency services on scene were the police, I moved on to the driver of car 1, he was the better of the 3 casualties, although he was still trapped inside his vehicle. Again I introduced myself and briefly assessed him, he was alert, although completely disorientated. I tried to reassure him as much as I could, his neck was painful, so I was doing my best to make sure he kept his head still. By now the scene had become littered with firemen, although they were concentrating on the other car so I stayed with the man in car 1 talking to him, although he couldn't remember anything at all.
Eventually the ambulance arrived, I explained who I was and one of the paramedics asked me to stay with the man I'd been talking to until the other ambulance arrived. I could hear the emergency service working frantically behind me to free the women in the other car. I kept being as reassuring as I could and after what seemed like days the other ambulance arrived, I briefly explained what I knew and what the man in car 1 had told me about his condition. Finally I took a step back to look at the carnage.
Despite the carnage, the whole scene was rather calm and quiet. It is impossible to describe but certainly the reality is completely different to anything you could ever dream or see on TV. As I stood there talking to one of the witnesses, he asked who I was and I explained. "Coming towards your exams eh? You'll soon have a different title then won't ya?" he said. The reality is that if I pass these exams he's right, I won't be a final year medical student, I'll be a doctor. My worry then is that people will expect things of me in such a scenario. It was clear to me that there are no heroes in a situation like that, it takes a real team effort by everyone involved. Without that, things wouldn't get done, and people would die. I don't know what happened to the casualties today, indeed I may never know but I really hope that everyone involved is ok, and my thoughts are with them and their families.
Finally, and not that I've ever had anything but respect for paramedics and the emergency services but after today, I've got a whole new admiration for the work they do. It is one thing being the doctor in A+E surrounded by all his equipment and a team of nurses on the receiving end of an ill patient, but a paramedic, first on the scene to something like this. They really do deserve a great deal of respect!
As for exams, they're a walk in the park compared to this. Reality is so much more terrifying.
It was so difficult to even begin to write about today's events, I'm not even sure I should have. I know I had little to offer and I don't think anything would have been different if I hadn't stopped, but I'm glad I did, and if I'm ever in that situation again, I hope I'll be a little more confident that I can do something, even if it amounts to little more than nothing.
leave a comment here: http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blo...0&isPopup=true
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27-04-2008, 06:19 PM
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#48 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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piss off!
I don't seek out the most remote and quietest place in the library for you to come and sit on the table next to me and spend 10 minutes talking to your 'bro' on your mobile. Prick. Kindly piss the hell off!
They Think Its All Over....
Well it very nearly almost is. I finished my last clinical placement on Friday. This signifies a couple of things, firstly that I'm supposed to know everything that I could possibly need to function as a doctor and secondly that finals are in 2 weeks.
2 weeks tomorrow, my first exam, then 2 more, spread out over the rest of the week and that is it. I'm free...at least for a month until results.
As a result of this, I'm not going to be writing, or reading blogs much over the next 3 weeks. Well that is the plan anyway. I know I've already mentioned my upcoming exams plenty of times and thanks to all those of you who've wished me luck.
Best of luck to all those readers who are also sitting exams as we come towards the end of another year.
Come on over and leave a comment here:
http://imamedicalstudentgetmeoutofhere.blogspot.com/
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04-05-2008, 02:11 PM
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#49 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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Blogging Revision
Ok, so I'm not supposed to be blogging because I'm supposed to be revising but I had a wonderful thought - what if I combined the two?
What better way to revise ethics and consent than to discuss it. It's a grey area without a yes or no answer. It is more a matter of common sense and opinion so I'm asking for your opinions on the following scenarios:
1) You are the SHO on an upper GI surgery firm, you are told to explain a diagnosis of gastric cancer and start to consent a schizophrenic patient for surgery.
2) You are a new GP partner in a GP surgery seeing a woman who is going in for a elective operation, and she doesn't want the people in the hospital to know about her Hep C status... it turns out that she thinks if the hospital knows about her Hep C status, her social worker would find out and not let her to see her daughter.
3) A husband slept with prostitute in Thailand on business trip. Wife is unaware but attends GP with sore throat & demands to know what’s wrong with husband & wants same treatment.
So, how might you approach the above situations, go on, leave a comment and help with my revision.
Click here to leave a comment and help with my revision: http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blo...8&isPopup=true
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09-05-2008, 09:29 PM
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#50 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 67
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Close To The End
3 years of life in hospital as a medical student hopefully came to an end today. Shitters
Exams Monday, Tuesday, Friday next week. Shitters
Then its all over. Shitters.
Results 1 month later (don't even get me started on that). Shitters
Argh shitters!
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