I can think one one very good place for you to put your pity and it rhymes with brass.😉 Ignorant of EM? Of course I'm ignorant of EM but what I'm NOT ignorant of are the different health outcomes of people of color who end up in the ER. More likly to die of an MI in the dam ER, more likely to NOT have their strokes symptoms treated in a timely fashion, more likely to have a diabetic coma confused with being drunk, and on and on. And I'm not the only one who feels that racism plays a HUGE role in health disparities. I'm just the only one without DR in front of their name bold enough to just come out and say it.
Personally, I think everyone in this thread should go to the local ER, sit in one of those cheap gowns with your a$$ out for 4 hours, then get back to this thread about how you feel medicine is practiced. It's pretty obvious that some of you are NEVER going to "get it" until you have some expereince as a patient under your belt and hopefully it will be at one of those hospitals that serves the underserved.👍
They only had to sit in the department for four hours? That's service. We have people sitting around all day, some for minor complaints like "abdominal pain" that is relieved, finally, after a bowel movement. I tell many of my patients who complain about the time it takes to get things done, "Look, you felt sick enough to come to the Emergency Room and we're taking you seriously enough to do a work up. Think about it like you've been admitted to the hospital for the day."
Then we make sure to get them chow (if they can eat) and people are usually happy, or at least resigned to the fact that things move slowly. They have pretty good TV in most of the rooms and bays. And it helps if you "round" on your sitters every now and then when you have time just to keep them up to date.
Seriously though, if you come for a minor complaint, like a "chest cold" or a little nausea and vomiting in an otherwise healthy four-year-old you just need to be prepared to both wait a while in the waiting room and sit for a while once they bring you back. Or what part of "Emergency" didn't they understand?
Also, almost nobody dies of an MI in the department. They are either dead when they get here or they die in the CCU after transfer. Also, nobody ignores somebody of any race or class who's actively infarcting. Everybody with chest pain gets a stat EKG and if you are brought in unconcious you get one even "stat-er." I don't know 1Path's level of medical knowledge but the EKG changes for someone actively infarcting are pretty apparent most of the time. People do have NSTEMIs with no acute EKG changes but these are the people with milder anginal symptoms, not somebody coming in pale, sweaty, vomiting, short of breath, and grabbing his chest...people who are at death's door in other words.
In the rare case that someone is having a severe NSTEMI, well, clinical presentation and judgement trumps lab tests and studies a lot of the time.
Come on 1Path. 'Fess up. You may be a cracker-jack social worker but you know next to nothing about medicine. Tell us your level of medical experience or cease and desist.
Oh, and the typical poor stroke patient, and I had two the other night, waits a while before coming in. I think this a function of education more than anything else. The first question we ask the patient or the family is "When did the symptoms start?" As 1Path may or may not know, there is nothing really to be done for a stroke more than three hours old. If it's 1500 and the wife says that her husband started stumbling around at around noon, we are already out of the window for thrombolytics or much of anything else. They get a stat head CT to make sure there is no acute incranial bleeding that might cause them to herniate, and sometimes they find a big aneurysm that hasn't burst but which can be coiled but usually they just go up to the stroke unit and everybody stands around doing practically nothing because there is nothing, acutley, to do.