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Surprised no one even mentioned taking out drains, catheters or lines. I'd think it'd be embarrassing if you didn't know how to do those.
Yikes. Sounds like I need to play catchup in MS4 then.
Surprised no one even mentioned taking out drains, catheters or lines. I'd think it'd be embarrassing if you didn't know how to do those.
Surprised no one even mentioned taking out drains, catheters or lines. I'd think it'd be embarrassing if you didn't know how to do those.

Also, just because you did something once or twice in medical school does not mean you can do the post-op care for other specialties.
As in the case when the PM&R resident at the rehab hospital called to tell us he removed half the sutures on an orbital reconstruction with all kinds of flaps and grafts.
Why did he remove half the sutures? Because he decided halfway through that he couldn't figure out why the sutures were placed and called to ask.
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Disagree. Other crucial must know procedures include:
1. Proper list printing (I.e. In Gravity rounding order, perfectly aligned so as to minimize steps from room to room on rounds)
2. Coffee fetching
Worst is when someone doesn't know how but is too embarrassed to ask. That leads to people trying to yank pigtails without cutting the string, reaccumulation pneumothoraces from an improperly pulled chest tube, or pulling a line while a patient is sitting up in a chair (actually happened on a medicine service a couple years ago, patient died).
Can't say I really remember how to do this. I'll ask for supervision before I pull one though since removing one of the above is almost never an emergency (while placing one likely is)
I think one of the most important skills to learn in med school is wound assessment and care.
Being able to take a dressing off, look at a wound, decide whether it's infected/healing well/healing poorly/etc, and then appropriately re-dress the wound.
It's something I really try to show the med students, because all sorts of specialties end up seeing patients with wounds. So many people are afraid to look because they don't want to bother the patient or repack the wound or "mess with" another services wound (despite the fact the nurses are changing it most of the time) etc.
We try to hammer this into our student's heads on the 3rd year clerkship.
Doesn't work and we have to deal with occasional complaints about having to do wound care being "scut"
Surprised no one even mentioned taking out drains, catheters or lines. I'd think it'd be embarrassing if you didn't know how to do those.
There's nothing embarrassing about not knowing how to do these things. In fact, most people will never have to do it.
Worst is when someone doesn't know how but is too embarrassed to ask. That leads to people trying to yank pigtails without cutting the string, reaccumulation pneumothoraces from an improperly pulled chest tube, or pulling a line while a patient is sitting up in a chair (actually happened on a medicine service a couple years ago, patient died).