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I am just wondering if you can do that.
Good Response!!! thanxOriginally posted by dwstranger
If the issue is that it grosses you out, you might just have to deal with it until you get past those rotations and into your Psych residency.
Originally posted by lizzied2003
phar, in many of the hospitals i've worked in when the nurses could not get an IV or the lab could not get blood it was the med student/intern/resident who was on that got called.
also, during a code in our place it usually the intern or senior who places the central line, draws femoral gases, drops NGT, etc while the junior resident runs the code.
i think the problem might be there might be some situations when you are 'IT' and there is no one else to call.
i have faith however that while doing surgery might not appeal to you; you will begin more tolerable of the blood thing as your exposure increases. I worked with a med student once who near fainted when he saw the foley bag of a patient who just had urologoical surgery and is now a succcessful urology surgeon. good luck.
Originally posted by lizzied2003
in many of the hospitals i've worked in when the nurses could not get an IV or the lab could not get blood it was the med student/intern/resident who was on that got called.
No doubt. If I get called, the nurse knows s/he's getting a central line, external jugular IV, femoral stick, or some other large vessel approach. I tell them, if you couldn't get a peripheral IV, and the LifeFlight paramedics couldn't get a peripheral IV, then my chance of getting it is about zip.Originally posted by Samoa
yeah, and I have to say, that totally cracks me up. --The nurse, who spends a significant amount of time starting IV's and drawing blood, can't get a line, so hey! let's call in the med student!![]()
Originally posted by phar
Okay guys!!!.....but I WILL TRY to restrain from such activities. I remember my anatomy class where we had this cadaver which smelled like hell..i don't know if it was the body or the chemical(formaldehyde)...........Since i am not in medical school yet, i guess i don't have to worry about it for right now.
Originally posted by Firebird
I'm always amazed at the ability with which SDN members are able to criticize people. So the person doesn't want to mess with blood...yeah, it's a basic thing when it comes to medicine, but have a little compassion for someone who is in a pickle.
It would definitely be impossible to get through med school without dealing with surgery, blood, etc. So those of you who criticized phar would have perhaps been better off helping him/her deal with the problem, as opposed to saying, "Medicine isn't for you."
And criticizing someone's grammar or word choice is really annoying, too.
Originally posted by phar
thanks firebird. That is one of the reasons why i left SDN. Just an update information. I have started volunteering at a local hospital(ER). So, i have been assisting nurses cleaning beds, talking and other things. I am getting used to it. Also, i have an interview coming up where i will work as a phelobotamist. That should eliminate my all fears. The only thing left is the smelling-side of working with cadavers.
Originally posted by fourthyear
One more point - I can't think of any specialty that doesn't require you to do some kind of internship including at least a few months of medicine (where you WILL see blood and other gross things). Internship is a job, where, unlike a student, you can get fired for refusing to do things that are part of your job like start central lines.
Originally posted by Firebird
ici_cute
I do not think that in the United States that a doctor is required to provide care to a person who is in an emergency outside the physician's normal scope of practice. In the US, providing help is totally up to you...at least that is my understanding. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong.
I know in France this is not the case. If you witness an emergency, you are required to provide help to someone in need.
Originally posted by Digginit
And I'm certainly not the most informed person on the issue, but I thought that as physicians we are required to provide care in an emergency.....I'd like to know the answer to that. Heck....I
:Originally posted by mikecwru
Are you a physician? You should know the answer. You are morally, but not legally, obligated care outside of the hospital in an emergency. In the hospital, that's a different story.
mike
Originally posted by bts4202
Moral of the story: religion and personal preference come second to patient care.
I know these circumstances would probably not all happen at once, but on any major holiday there would be chaos if anyone was allowed to set limits on their patient care due to religous beliefs. Don't forget that it is not just doctors I am talking about, there are nurses and techs also that must be considered in the same equation.
Originally posted by Firebird
The scenario you provided was absolutely ludicrous. That would never happen, not in a million years...well, maybe once in a MILLION years.
You assume that there are a lot of very deeply religious people out there who are interested in medicine, but not interested in making concessions. In fact, there are not. Most are willing to make any concession they can to be a doctor. The example you bring up about Jewish people working on the Sabbath. This is completely contrary to Jewish law, but most are willing to make an exception. There is, no doubt, a very small group that would not do this.
The point is...there will only be a handful of people who are not willing to budge an inch from their religious beliefs. It would not be incredibly easy to accomodate them, but they deserve the same opportunities as you do. It would certainly be possible to help them out.
Perhaps their specialties could be limited to where they would be more apt to fit within their belief system. For example, Pathology residents typically don't work weekends (good for Jewish people) and unless they were on BB service, they wouldn't be in contact with blood. Such a schedule would be easy to make for a person during the Ramadan season.
Originally posted by doc05
Actually, that is all nonsense.
And medical students must do everything, not just the specialties that fit in their "belief system."
Originally posted by bts4202
Nonsense or not, you still missed the whole point!! If a doctor or student or who ever is allowed to leave the hospital due to religion than that is fine. HOWEVER, if the person is forced to work, than that person CAN NOT refuse to treat a patient based on religion. That is called..... abandonment and is a criminal offense. The student who was repremanded and kicked off the surgical rotation for refusing to touch blood because it was Ramadan was done with just cause. I would want MY doctor to treat me immediately and completely no matter what his/her religous beliefs are. You need to reread the hippocratic oath.
Originally posted by Firebird
Ok, I will be mature enough to admit it. I did miss the point you were making. If a doctor leaves his patient, that's big trouble. However, a person with such beliefs should take care of the problem before he is put in that situation.
If I am about to leave the wards for church on Sunday morning, I would have no problem whatsoever saving a person's life if there was a problem. My whole point was, that there shoudl be concessions made so that a person with reasonable beliefs and needs can be accomodated into the medical profession.