- Joined
- Nov 22, 2007
- Messages
- 86
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- 1
Hi,
Last Friday, I finished my room early but that just meant pink slips into my room! No problem. Except the case they wanted to put into my room was a deathly ill patient (pH 7.02) fulminant c.diff, septic, elderly patient with other illnesses near death. The Surgeons felt this patient was not going to make it and that Surgery would be utterly useless, and in fact, she may not have survived the O.R.
The family REALLY wanted intervention and the Surgeons felt "forced" to take this patient to surgery. Where does this leave us (Surgeons and me)?
Can I refuse to be the Anesthesiologist for a case which will end in a mortality that would probably be tacked on to my record/profile? I want to have a clean file as best as possible and that doesn't mean I'd never to do a bad case (because working at a Trauma Center, I don't have a choice most of the time). In this case, it seems a bit foggy. What are my "rights" in such situations? For that matter, what would the rights of ANY Physician be in such a situation?
I think the answer here is probably a simple and straightforward one, but I can't see it.
Thanks.
Last Friday, I finished my room early but that just meant pink slips into my room! No problem. Except the case they wanted to put into my room was a deathly ill patient (pH 7.02) fulminant c.diff, septic, elderly patient with other illnesses near death. The Surgeons felt this patient was not going to make it and that Surgery would be utterly useless, and in fact, she may not have survived the O.R.
The family REALLY wanted intervention and the Surgeons felt "forced" to take this patient to surgery. Where does this leave us (Surgeons and me)?
Can I refuse to be the Anesthesiologist for a case which will end in a mortality that would probably be tacked on to my record/profile? I want to have a clean file as best as possible and that doesn't mean I'd never to do a bad case (because working at a Trauma Center, I don't have a choice most of the time). In this case, it seems a bit foggy. What are my "rights" in such situations? For that matter, what would the rights of ANY Physician be in such a situation?
I think the answer here is probably a simple and straightforward one, but I can't see it.
Thanks.