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I am on a rotation right now, and I am pretty handy with the ophthalmoscope. Today we were rounding with the attending and a resident, and the attending was looking at a patient's eyes with the ophthalmoscope as part of an exam. After trying, the attending said that he/she couldn't visualize the fundus, and that we should call an ophtho consult. After rounding, I used my scope to look at the patient, and I managed to see the disk pretty clearly with some pathology actually present.
I went back to my resident and told her what I found, and it sounded like he/she was impressed that I was able to do that. But now I am worried that it will make its way up the ranks back to the attending that I checked the patient again, and that he/she will be pissed that I was double-checking him/her or making him/her look bad.
What do you think?
I went back to my resident and told her what I found, and it sounded like he/she was impressed that I was able to do that. But now I am worried that it will make its way up the ranks back to the attending that I checked the patient again, and that he/she will be pissed that I was double-checking him/her or making him/her look bad.
What do you think?
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