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The only good thing about this year is finishing another monthly rotation, or discharging and deleting oatients fron the sign out.
D/C streetz. Or sometimes D/c to Jesus if you're in the ICU.The only good thing about this year is finishing another monthly rotation, or discharging and deleting oatients fron the sign out.
The only good thing about this year is finishing another monthly rotation, or discharging and deleting oatients fron the sign out.
Crossing them off and removing them from the printed list always felt so incredibly satisfying and strangely fulfilling... until you come in the next day with two more pages of overnight admissions.
Intern year is tough, no question about that, but it is in my opinion the most important year of your career, especially if you are fortunate enough to have a medicine internship.
Learn everything you can learn, even if you think it's irrelevant to your anesthesia future.
We like to call it "d/c to a higher level of care" around here.D/c to Jesus if you're in the ICU.
But I feel like I'm not even learning much. I'm just too exhausted and annoyed to actually take some things in.
But I feel like I'm not even learning much. I'm just too exhausted and annoyed to actually take some things in. I hate managing so many patient's at once; it's hard for me to focus.
Btw thanks for making his thread, OP. I was literally about to make the same vent thread.
We like to call it "d/c to a higher level of care" around here.
mIntern year is tough, no question about that, but it is in my opinion the most important year of your career, especially if you are fortunate enough to have a medicine internship.
Learn everything you can learn, even if you think it's irrelevant to your anesthesia future.
m
I think a surgery internship is equally if not more valuable. I learned how to manage the stuff we commonly deal with while also learning procedural skills. And the best benefit of all was participating in surgical procedures so I knew what was happening and could anticipate future steps and possible badness.
Trust me, you are learning way more than you currently realize. Take a minute to think how you are as a doc now compared to July.
As long as I'm not on an inpatient service where there are multiple patients trying to die on me, someone is going crazy on a different floor and nurses paging me off the hook I'm okay