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We don't have any residents where I am at. And we are expected to write the orders which go to pending.WHOA! Slow down there. I am guessing you are going into 3rd year? I am positive there will be residents or someone there to teach you the ropes. It would be highly improbably for them to throw you onto an EMR and tell you to do an admit. Medicine it fun if you like details. 🙂 Here are some things to keep in mind.
You'll need to interview the patient, obviously. Things to cover will be chief complaint, HPI including the 7 dimensions, PMH (specifically ask about diabetes, heart disease, strokes, etc), past surgical history, past family history, social history (alcohol, tobacco, drugs, travel, living situation, etc), review of systems, review any medications/supplements they are taking, and cover allergies and DNR status.
Do a full physical, including a brief neuro exam. As a student, GU may or may not be done.
I have no idea what kind of stuff they want you to do regarding actually admitting documentation and orders. This is typically left to the resident. You can start and pend it using the limited access med students sometimes have. Things to keep in mind:
-Admitting location (ICU, Med-surg, etc)
-Diagnosis
-Condition
-Vitals
-Diet (regular, diabetic, cardiac, etc)
-Pain control (tylenol, dilaudid, norco)
-Ambulation
-Allergies
-Fluid resuscitation (you can usually give 1L bolus, unless it's a cardiac patient)
-Fluid maintenance
-Consults (surgery, neurology, nephrology, etc)
-Tests (CBC, BMP, morning lytes, UA, CXR, mg, phos, etc)
You'll do fine. We admit patients like crazy here, too. That meant that the first few days we'd give it our best shot and the residents would tell us what we did wrong and how to improve. Work hard and it'll pay off!
As far as admissions go, I just have some Qs
- do pretty much everyone get a standing order for docusate sodium or bisacodyl? How much/frequent do you typically give? (I've seen varying suggestions)
- For maintenance fluids on most (obv not all) what is the typical fluid? D5 1/4 40 mEq K? How is this typically written?
- VTE prophylaxis... what is the default here? Obviously everyone will be different (renal function and whatnot), but assuming no contraindications to anything
- Unfrac. heparin 5,000U SQ Q8H-Q12H
- enoxaparin 40mg SQ Q24H
- dalteparin) 5,000U SQ Q24H
- Fondaparinux 2.5mg SQ Q24H
Any tips for how to NOT piss off the attending/make these admits as smooth as possible? Obviously there will be problems due to our inexperience/cluelessness, and they will probably have to rewrite/redo most everything at first, but anything tips on extra things to do/resources to lower the learning curve or look good early on would help.
Ofc ofc, I am just really looking for a good starting point. I hear our surgery rotation is very similar in terms of how much we actually get to do as students though (also no surgery residents).^
Strong work. OP bear in mind that every attending will have certain quirks or preferences and that the above is not necessarily translatable to other specialties (eg, your post op patient may not need anticoagulation due to bleeding concerns; your patient with ulcerative colitis may not appreciate the Dulcolax).
It is a very unique situation where I am at. We have 3 teaching hospitals all within 20 minutes or less (at most) driving distance from each other. Two of them are level 1 trauma centers, and the level 2 is a 357 bed facility that is home to the only residency program at our campus (Family medicine). This is an MD school too.damn bro that's a sweet rotation
it's going to suck at the beginning but not having residents is amazing because what happens a lot is that you end up shadowing a lot unless you have an awesome resident that makes you do stuff and teaches you things. this is not very common
Sometimes our EM RNs think its 1) Orders 2) See the patient. I have to remind them there's a logical order to all this, although I do agree sometimes orders could be put in and the patient could be seen the next day 😉i would start with orders.

Sometimes our EM RNs think its 1) Orders 2) See the patient. I have to remind them there's a logical order to all this, although I do agree sometimes orders could be put in and the patient could be seen the next day 😉![]()
I feel like this is an unfinished story...Just shotgun labs and imaging for any given chief complaint.
I had a horrible experience though.
How do you admit patients? In our clerkship manual it says "med students are responsible for admitting all patients, blah blah etc." but doesn't have any info HOW you gots to do it.
Internal medicine rotation begins tomorrow.
Help plz
I so scared
I admit, I don't work in the ED.I did that on EM. Seeing the patient changed management a minority of the time. Just shotgun labs and imaging for any given chief complaint.
I had a horrible experience though.
Any other resource like this? (matching good questions to ask with complaints)The first ones helps with Qs to ask given a particular complaint - SOB
Sometimes our EM RNs think its 1) Orders 2) See the patient. I have to remind them there's a logical order to all this, although I do agree sometimes orders could be put in and the patient could be seen the next day 😉![]()