Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Life at Grady: Internship/Residency Chronicles, Pt 2
A version of the following post, by Kimberly Manning, FACP, first appeared on the blog Reflections of a Grady Doctor.
"You, my friend, are a victim of disorganized thinking.
You are under the unfortunate impression
that just because you run away, you have no courage.
You're confusing courage with wisdom."
--The Wizard in "The Wizard of Oz"
I was looking at the schedule for inpatient ward assignments during the winter of my intern year. I found my name with my index finger and dragged it across the paper to find who my fearless leaders would be. My resident was a feisty third-year woman, with an excellent reputation for being smart, though tough. I could handle that. I followed the column upward until it landed squarely on a name that I wasn't so sure I could handle: Dr. Olds. Gasp. My attending that month was...eek...the Chairman of Medicine? Great.
(Click "more" below to continue reading this post.)
Here's the thing: I was in a combined training program where every three months I switched from assignments in Pediatrics to Internal Medicine, then back again. My yellow brick road was convoluted, to say the least, and finding my footing during those early days wasn't always easy. This upcoming ward month would be my "back to Medicine" month after three rigorous months of Pediatrics. I still had NICU, newborn nursery, and pediatric emergencies on the brain. Those first few days after the switch always felt a little shaky; I'd mastered the art of looking confident when deep down inside I was a quivering blob of jello. But this was even more terrifying than usual. Now I was given the privilege of having a potential meltdown in front of the Wizard himself: the Chairman. Super.
Okay, so I was a PGY (post-graduate-year) 1 back then, but can I say that even now, as a PGY 13, I would find it equally mortifying to be under the microscope of my Chairman? Picture it. Every day, you get to present your patients, what you discerned from your history and physical, and subsequently do your best to field the barrage of Socratic questioning that would surely ensue. From your Chairman. This meant that a screw-up or a bad day could have monumental consequences. A category 1 nausea hurricane quickly organized in the pit of my stomach with every ingredient for growth into category 5.
The good news is that despite how intimidated I was by my Chairman-turned-ward attending, he was pretty nice. In fact, he was more than that--he was really, really nice and surprisingly approachable. The other good thing is that my resident was excellent that month, and she cracked a mean whip on us interns. She'd make us present our patients to her first, and would pick our write-ups apart and then reassemble them before rounds every day. In other words, there was never a performance without a dress rehearsal and a sound check.
Follow the yellow brick road...
One night on call, I was being covered by a different resident. His name was Gary-- a second-year resident who was smart, but much less confident than the mini-general that I'd become so accustomed to. This resident would ask me what I thought we should do. And not just in that obligatory way that folks often do when talking to medical students or interns. This guy really needed me to co-sign his decisions. Even though I was feeling more and more comfortable with clinical decision-making, his anemic leadership was terrifying. And even more so since my attending was--had he gotten the memo? Uhhh, the freakin' Chairman of Medicine.
It came to a head when we stood before a woman we'd just admitted with community-acquired pneumonia. Gary and I had just gone down to the Radiology suite to review her x-rays which, consistent with her lung exam, revealed a moderate- sized fluid collection around her left lung. My wobbly leader discussed the next steps with me as we rode the elevator back up to the patient's room.
"She has a pleural effusion, so the next step is to sample the fluid with a thoracentesis, okay?" Gary asked/said. Then he reached in his pocket and thumbed through the Washington Manual under "Management of Pleural Effusions." He looked up at me and added, "I think that sounds like the right thing to do, don't you?"
I didn't like this co-sign thing. I needed him to speak with authority. I wanted him to be so comfortable with this situation that he could quiz me on the Light's criteria for pleural effusions while picking dirt out of his nails with the edge of an index card. Didn't he get it? I wanted to be his intern, not his co-resident. I furrowed my brow and answered him, "Uh, it's my understanding that an effusion that size needs to be tapped. And I guess depending on what it shows, you determine whether or not a chest tube is necessary."
What did I say that for? Gary's face went pale, and he swallowed hard. "Oh my gosh. I really, really hope she doesn't need a chest tube. Oh my gosh." He shook his head and muttered while devouring the tiny paragraphs printed on the pages of the Washington Manual. Now I somehow felt like a jinx.
But this patient looked good. In fact, the only thing that had prompted her admission was her abnormal x-ray. She'd had this fever for two days associated with a cough, and when it didn't go away, she decided to come to the emergency department. This patient was youngish--in her forties--and had been in perfect health. Since she didn't usually get sick and made regular visits to her primary care doctor, she grew a bit worried. She didn't smoke, didn't use drugs or alcohol, and was breathing well enough to not require oxygen. During her visits to her PCP, she'd had regular lab work including several negative HIV antibody tests. And so, the truth is that this lady was not sick-sick by any stretch of the word. She just had an ugly x-ray which sometimes can be enough to make even the most bad-ass of Emergency Department doctors uncomfortable.
A third year senior from the ICU supervised me as I did the procedure since Gary wasn't comfortable being the overseer. The patient tolerated the thoracentesis quite well--in fact, what I remember the most about her was just how great she looked overall. Clinically cool, yes. But radiographically cool? Uhhh, not so much.
After carefully removing a sample of fluid from the space around her lungs, I confirmed that we hadn't introduced air or caused any complications by checking on both her follow up x-rays and how she was doing. Just like when I'd seen her in the Emergency Department earlier that night, she looked great. My nervous upper level stood beside me as I led the conversation.
"How are you feeling, Mrs. Elmore?"
"I'm actually feeling a lot better. The cough seems to be loosening up some more, and now I'm bringing up more phlegm. I still have a little pain on my left side, but it seems a touch better since you guys took some of the fluid off of my lung." She really did look like she felt better. Even better than she looked before the thoracentesis. "I think my fever broke, too."
"Are you breathing alright?"
"Yeah, I'm okay. My nurse says I am still breathing a little faster than normal, but like I said, I was surprised when they wanted to keep me. I guess I'm glad you guys did since I had the fluid around my lung--what did you call that again?"
"A pleural effusion," I answered with careful enunciation of the technical terms.
"That's right, the pleural effusion. Yeah, but I am feeling a little better. I think I'm going to try to get me some rest," she said with a smile, "I hope you all get some, too." I glanced up at the clock on the wall beside us. 1:36 a.m. I smiled back at Mrs. Elmore and raised my eyebrows. Sleep? Yeah, right.
"You do the resting," I laughed. "I'll be checking on the results of your fluid, and will let you know what it says. The fluid looked pretty clear, so I won't wake you if it isn't too exciting. Right now, I'm anticipating that we won't see anything alarming." I did my best to speak with the authority that I knew my supervisor that night had not quite grown into yet. We both bid Mrs. Elmore adieu as she nodded and rolled over in her bed.
2:21 a.m.
I had my head down for a catnap at the nurses station when my pager startled me awake. It was the "Stat Lab"--I recognized the number. I whipped out my pen and a piece of paper in preparation of Mrs. Elmore's unexciting pleural fluid values.
"I have a critical lab value for you on patient Elmore," spoke the lab technician. He didn't waste any time. "I've got a pH on a pleural fluid specimen of 6.9."
I thought I'd heard him wrong. "Excuse me?"
"The pH on your pleural fluid sample. It's 6.9," he repeated firmly.
"6.9? On patient Elmore?" Again, he affirmed that this was indeed the patient, and no, he didn't stutter: 6.9 was indeed the value. I felt the hurricane swirling in the pit of my stomach again. A pH of less than 7.2 meant the fluid was likely pus, or what we refer to as an empyema. And one of the first things you learn in medical school is that "pus must pass." Uggh. Mrs. Elmore needed a chest tube--the only way for pus to pass out of the pleural space.
"Shoot!" I said aloud thinking about how peaceful she'd looked when we'd left her bedside. I imagined us rustling her awake only to have some baby-faced surgical intern consent her for a hollow tube the size of her pinkie finger to be inserted into her chest. "Shoot!" I repeated. This stunk.
Before I could even fully process it all, Gary was flitting about me like some sort of anxious hummingbird. "You saw that the pH is 6.9!" he exclaimed, "I already called surgery for a chest tube. They're coming. You think she needs a chest tube? I mean, less than 7.2 then she does, right? This is awful. This is so, so awful." He looked like he was going to be sick, which made me feel the same. I longed for my drill sergeant day resident, who likely would have smacked Gary and told him to get a grip. He was making me anxious. I gathered my cards up and prepared myself to go and speak to Mrs. Elmore.
Gary shuffled beside me as I reached the foot of her bed. I could hear her breathing; peacefully sleeping without oxygen or any respiratory distress whatsoever. I whispered to Gary, "Don't you think she looks too good for that pH and way too good to need a chest tube?"
He gave me a puzzled look. "But the pH is 6.9," he spoke more firmly than he had all evening. He paused for a moment to make sure we didn't wake her before adding, "Despite how good she looks, she needs a chest tube!"
"Could it maybe be a lab error? I'm just worried because a chest tube is like a really big deal." We both stared at her quietly for a few moments. I turned and faced Gary before saying the unthinkable. "I think you should call the attending."
It was like my mouth moved in slow motion. I just suggested to my nervous upper-level that he call not just the attending, but the Chairman of Medicine--oh, at 2:40 in the morning to boot. Good luck with that.
"But it is clearly less than 7.2. It's even under 7.0, Kim. This is clear cut. She needs the chest tube."
Great. We've been on this yellow brick road all night, and now the lion finds his courage on the first decision of our call that I actually wanted him to get my input on. I decided to challenge him. "This doesn't make sense, Gary. Dr. Olds always tells us to pay attention when things don't make sense. I think we should call him. If you won't, I'm willing to."
"Call Olds?" he gasped. "You will not call our Chairman at 3 a.m. to ask him an obvious question. Absolutely not." He scowled and walked out of Mrs. Elmore's room to punctuate his position. Great. Now he'd found some heart, too.
I wouldn't give up. I finally convinced Gary to let me call Dr. Olds, but he made it clear that I should tell him I did so without his blessing. In other words, "If you have the audacity to kick open the gates of Emerald City and smack the Wizard on the back of his head in the middle of the night, you'll be doing it on your own." That was fine with me. I just didn't want to see this healthy woman be subjected to a chest tube that she surely wouldn't want and that possibly she didn't need.
And so I called the Wizard s at 3-something in the morning -- without the lion, the tin man or the scarecrow to back me up. Just PGY1 me, waking up first the Chairman's wife, who (as I sat there mortified) let me hear her calling my Chairman "honey" until he was wakeful enough to grab the receiver. Lawd.
Fortunately, just like he had been all month long, the Chairman was wonderfully patient when I got him on the phone. Once I got past my fear, I methodically ran down all that had happened--including her low-grade temperature, bright smile/not-sick appearance, normal oxygenation, and then peaceful slumber I'd witnessed a moment before. "Could she look this good with a rip-roaring 6.9 pH empyema in her chest?"
"Call the lab and ask them to repeat it," spoke Dr. Olds decisively. "It sounds like a lab error. Definitely don't put a thoracostomy tube in her without having them run it again."
"Okay," I eeked out while looking at Gary. He held his hands out to say, What? I wrote in all caps on an index card what Dr. Olds had just told me:
REPEAT IT. NO CHEST TUBE YET. And that's exactly what we did.
3:39 a.m.
Page from the Stat Lab.
"Repeat pleural fluid pH: 7.38." (Normal.)
***
Later that morning before rounds, I stood at the foot of Mrs. Elmore's bed as she continued to sleep. I looked at my pinky finger, then back at her and sighed a breath of relief. She was discharged early the following day--without an extended hospitalization, complications...or a chest tube.
Labels: internship, Life at Grady, residency training
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Blog log
Members of the American College of Physicians contribute posts from their own sites to ACP Internist and ACP Hospitalist. Contributors include:
Albert Fuchs, MD
Albert Fuchs, MD, FACP,
graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles School of
Medicine, where he also did his internal medicine training.
Certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine, Dr. Fuchs
spent three years as a full-time faculty member at UCLA School of
Medicine before opening his private practice in Beverly Hills in
2000.
David Katz, MD
David L. Katz, MD, MPH, FACP, is an internationally renowned
authority on nutrition, weight management, and the prevention of
chronic disease, and an internationally recognized leader in
integrative medicine and patient-centered care.
DrDialogue
Juliet K. Mavromatis, MD, FACP, provides a conversation about
health topics for patients and health professionals.
Dr. Mintz' Blog
Matthew Mintz, MD, FACP, has practiced internal medicine for more
than a decade and is an Associate Professor of Medicine at an
academic medical center on the East Coast. His time is split
between teaching medical students and residents, and caring for
patients.
Everything Health
Toni Brayer, MD, FACP, blogs about the rapid changes in science,
medicine, health and healing in the 21st century.
FutureDocs
Vineet Arora, MD, FACP, is Associate Program Director for the
Internal Medicine Residency and Assistant Dean of Scholarship &
Discovery at the Pritzker School of Medicine for the University of
Chicago. Her education and research focus is on resident duty
hours, patient handoffs, medical professionalism, and quality of
hospital care. She is also an academic hospitalist.
Glass
Hospital
John H. Schumann, MD, FACP, provides transparency on the workings
of medical practice and the complexities of hospital care,
illuminates the emotional and cognitive aspects of caregiving and
decision-making from the perspective of an active primary care
physician, and offers behind-the-scenes portraits of hospital
sanctums and the people who inhabit them.
Gut Check
Ryan Madanick, MD, ACP Member, is a gastroenterologist at the
University of North Carolina School of Medicine, and the Program
Director for the GI & Hepatology Fellowship Program. He
specializes in diseases of the esophagus, with a strong interest in
the diagnosis and treatment of patients who have
difficult-to-manage esophageal problems such as refractory GERD,
heartburn, and chest pain.
I'm dok
ACP Member Mike Aref, MD, PhD, ACP Member, is an academic
hospitalist with an interest in basic and clinical science and
education, with interests in noninvasive monitoring and diagnostic
testing using novel bedside imaging modalities, diagnostic
reasoning, medical informatics, new medical education modalities,
pre-code/code management, palliative care, patient-physician
communication, quality improvement, and quantitative biomedical
imaging.
Just Oncology
Richard Just, MD, ACP Member, has 36 years in clinical practice of hematology and medical oncology. His blog is a joint publication with Gregg Masters, MPH.
KevinMD
Kevin Pho, MD, ACP Member, offers one of the Web's definitive sites
for influential health commentary.
MD
Whistleblower
Michael Kirsch, MD, FACP, addresses the joys and challenges of
medical practice, including controversies in the doctor-patient
relationship, medical ethics and measuring medical quality. When
he's not writing, he's performing colonoscopies.
Medical
Lessons
Elaine Schattner, MD, ACP Member, shares her ideas on education,
ethics in medicine, health care news and culture. Her views on
medicine are informed by her past experiences in caring for
patients, as a researcher in cancer immunology, and as a patient
who's had breast cancer.
Prescriptions
David M. Sack, MD, FACP, practices general gastroenterology at a
small community hospital in Connecticut. His blog is a series of
musings on medicine, medical care, the health care system and
medical ethics, in no particular order.
Reflections
of a Grady Doctor
Kimberly Manning, MD, FACP, reflects on the personal side of being
a doctor in a community hospital in Atlanta.
Technology in (Medical) Education
Neil Mehta, MBBS, MS, FACP, is interested in use of technology in
education, social media and networking, practice management and
evidence-based medicine tools, personal information and knowledge
management.
White Coat Underground
Peter A. Lipson, MD, ACP Member, is a practicing internist and
teaching physician in Southeast Michigan. The blog, which has been
around in various forms since 2007, offers musings on the
intersection of science, medicine, and culture.
ACP Internist and ACP Hospitalist also contribute to and draw upon content from Get Better Health, a network created by Val Jones, MD, to support and promote health care professional bloggers, provide insightful and trustworthy health commentary, and help to inform health policy makers about the clinician's point of view on health care reform, science, research and patient care.
Other blogs of note:
American
Journal of Medicine
Also known as the Green Journal, the American Journal of Medicine
publishes original clinical articles of interest to physicians in
internal medicine and its subspecialities, both in academia and
community-based practice.
Clinical Correlations
A collaborative medical blog started by Neil Shapiro, MD, ACP
Member, associate program director at New York University Medical
Center's internal medicine residency program. Faculty, residents
and students contribute case studies, mystery quizzes, news,
commentary and more.
db's Medical
Rants
Robert M. Centor, MD, FACP, contributes short essays contemplating
medicine and the health care system.
Interact
MD
Michael Benjamin, MD, ACP member, doesn't accept industry money so
he can create an independent, clinician-reviewed space on the
Internet for physicians to report and comment on the medical news
of the day.
PLoS
Blog
The Public Library of Science's open access materials include a
blog.
White Coat Rants
One of the most popular anonymous blogs written by an emergency
room physician.

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