bell412 said:
Im just a lowly srna so don't smoke my ass that bad but here how i see it. Why would an MDA want to do the intraoperative phase? Maybe some of you residents like this technical phase? i'm not trying to make anybody mad trust me. but think about it? the real job of an MDA at a busy medical center working with the crna is to play the MD role. what i'm saying is the MDA does ALL the preop work, puts out ALL the fires out during the intra-op phase while the crna is doing the technical aspect. then the mda has do deal with EVERY PATIENT in the post-operative phase. i remember one time during an induction (at 1000 am) the MDA was page, Im not ****tin ya - 15 times! During the friggin induction! Folks the MDA works there friggin ass off!! there not sitten the machine, there doin **** that a doctor is trained to do! do you guys really want to sit the stool, chart vital signs, dump pee, and get bossed around by a surgeon?
As a former "lowly SRNA" myself, now with 10 years CRNA experience, I've worked in almost every possible employment arrangement: solo CRNA, CRNA-only group, CRNA with floating MDA supervision, and CRNA and MDA on separate stools. It all depends on how you look at your place in the world.
I don't look at it as simply charting VS, deflecting oh-so-cute surgeon comments, etc. I look at it as "this patient has put their entire trust and faith in my abilities to keep them alive and homeostatic while this surgeon cuts them open."
Stop for a moment and reflect on that. Do you really, I mean really, comprehend the depth and intensity of that personal interaction?
I take it one patient at a time, and I give it my all. When I leave in the afternoon, I feel tired both mentally and physically, but I feel I earned my pay and that I gave my pts my very best. I also sleep very well at night.
I take great pride in doing my best (which requires staying on your toes, observing what the surgeon is doing and saying, and ALWAYS STAYING 10 MINUTES AHEAD OF THE SURGEON MENTALLY). The vast majority of the time, my gameplan has me extubating as the dressings are being applied, and my pts are in PACU warm, not nauseated, with stable VS, pain-free, and asking me "when are we going to the OR?" That outcome requires planning before-hand, staying alert in the OR (even when on auto-pilot) and forcing yourself to focus. I also frequently play "what if" with myself, always having plans B, C, and D at the ready.
Same thing when I'm flying. Even when cruising on auto-pilot, I'm always checking the closest possible landing site in case my engine craps out, what's my fuel consumption, etc etc.
Do I hit "slack spots" during long cases? Of course. Will you find me reading Newsweek? Never. I'll pull my Mass Gen or baby Barash out of my backpack and knock some rust off. I'll review the ACLS algorithms. I'll check the schedule, and have my supplies/equipment all set up (as much as possible) for the next case to minimize room turnover time. The earlier we finish, the earlier we go home.
You can just go through the motions (chart VS, act bored, etc) and receive a paycheck, or you can *earn* your compensaion and the title PROFESSIONAL on a daily basis by being one. Maybe that's why at my particular hospital I've had numerous co-workers (RNs, orderlies, the people really in the know about the goings-on in the OR) request me to personally give their anesthetic. They know I give a damn about every single pt.