I've had my first three nights of call, and they (knock on wood) haven't been that bad. My last night, Monday, was the worst so far, and besides trying to admit three patients while taking check-out, there wasn't that much of a frenzy.
Luckily, I don't get called too much at night, and when I do, it's generally something I can handle over the phone.
The most annoying thing that happens, and I guess this happens everywhere, is that when the nurse disagrees with my plan, she calls my senior resident, who tells her to do exactly what I told her to do. This is the most irritating part of cross-cover (for me, anyway), but I guess it'll continue to happen until they trust us more.
As for when I do have to go see the patients, it's usually chest pain which has resolved or someone trying to leave AMA so they can catch the bars before they close. Nothing that an EKG and some Ativan can't handle.
I got called for Dyspnea once, and subsequently found that the patient had turned off his Oxygen while keeping the nasal prongs on. I was very happy with that page, I can tell you.
I guess the most important things I've learned so far are the following:
1. Check the simple stuff first (is the O2 turned on?)
2. Always be nice to the nurses, even when the questions seem silly.
3. Always tell the nurses what you're thinking when you do something and DON'T ask what their opinion is, unless you're clueless.
4. Always be nice to the nurses. (It's important enough to state twice).
5. A good senior resident won't care when your question is dumb, and I've had plenty. Reassurance can be more valuable than anything.