I'm not saying that it's never appropriate to consult medicine, I'm saying at institutions I've been in, medicine would be consulted if they came in with a mildly elevated bp. and oddly enough at night all questions seem to get punted to medicine. nor am I accusing people of doing that, I know there are institution's where the services get along very well, but this isn't a universal truth.
Surgery is definitely not the only service who does this and this isn't everywhere. it's only been my experience in my hospitals that it works this way. But when I was on surgery we got so many bull**** consults from medicine that even I as a medicine intern knew were crap it wasn't funny. There was one medicine doc in particular who would reflexively consult surgery for "abd pain" if they even remotely complained of it and she'd consult before she ever saw the pts. There were 3 times in particular that I was the first one to see the pt and the abdominal pain was DKA (twice) and then another time it was C-diff. you don't need surgery for those.
The places I've rotated at, the surgeons are the prototypical jocks who only feel like cutting and if that's not the solution, then it's medicine's problem.
Gotcha...that does sound like a royal pain and that you need to rotate at some different hospitals where the surgeons are more interested in managing the entire patient. I frequently see Orthopods do the above (which reminds me of a story of an inappropriate consult to gen surg, but I'll leave that for another time in favor of...)
Reminds me of an "abd pain" consult I got recently on an obese woman in the vent unit of a local Rehab Hospital. Both the hospitalist and (I think) the Nephrologist had examined her abdomen and decided that she needed a surgical consult for pain (she was sedated and unable to communicate but apparently had winced when examined).
I examined her and found her abdomen totally benign. Another surgical attending did the same. All labs were normal. Vitals were normal. The hospitalist had ordered a CT scan before consulting us. It was normal.
I came back later in the day to reexamine her and her talkative husband was in the room. I again examined her, this time in front of him, and found her examine to be benign. He apparently was there when both the hospitalist and nephrologist examined her and demonstrated to me that I was "doing it wrong". He proceeded to show me the pointy hand, stabbing motion in an upwards fashion below both rib cages that the specialists had used to show her "pain". I reasoned that anyone, even he and I, would grimace if someone had assaulted us in similar fashion.
At any rate, all specialties have their complaints about bogus consults. And I can understand when you have an intubated sedated obese patinet on TPN, HD and steroids that it can be a difficult assessment. But please do not assault the patient on routine exam and then call it abd pain worthy of a consult.
Blade and I have trained in similar fashion where medicine or its subspecialty consults are rarely done except for critically ill patients, new diagnoses or major multi-system failure (which is generally covered in the critically ill category).
Its a "Sign of Weakness" to consult Medicine!
