- Joined
- Apr 2, 2006
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 0
Any of you done a prelim/transitional year as an intern where there was no IM/FP resident on call with you overnight? How did you handle those first few anxious months on your own?
MLB2000 said:Any of you done a prelim/transitional year as an intern where there was no IM/FP resident on call with you overnight? How did you handle those first few anxious months on your own?
MLB2000 said:Any of you done a prelim/transitional year as an intern where there was no IM/FP resident on call with you overnight?
alina_s said:I'm in a psych program and all of our intern year call on inpatient psych is solo. There's an attending on phone call but... I think this is fairly common in speciality programs. We took neurology call with phone support only as well, but at least the neurology first years have a year of medicine behind them.
KentW said:No, and I can't imagine any program allowing that to happen.
Idiopathic said:the intern is the only physician in a 100+ bed hospital (except for the ER staff). They regaled us with stories of 100 central lines during intern year and often running 2-3 codes per call shift.
madcadaver said:2-3 codes per shift in a 100ish bed hospital? It's a good experience to run codes, but somebody should consider taking care of the patients before they code...
Mumpu said:, I'm really curious what a solo intern will do if that gunshot wound in bed 3 decides to blow their femoral artery aneurysm at 4 am.
Back34 said:I won't bore you with the billions of questions I have nightmares about, regarding my first night on call as an intern (by MYSELF ?!?!). Suffice it to say, I'm going to find the most senior nurse on duty and offer to pay for food that night. The ensuing conversation will go something like this:
Me: "I have two favors to ask of you: please don't let me kill anybody and please make sure I wake up if something happens"
Nurse: "No problem"
Me: "God Bless You"
It's all cream cheese after that 😎 ...I hope
fab4fan said:Nurses are not house pets. You don't need to give us treats. Just be respectful and clean up your messes (we're not maids, either). Most nurses know that new interns have anxiety about call, and most of them will be glad to help you.
fab4fan said:Nurses are not house pets. You don't need to give us treats. Just be respectful and clean up your messes (we're not maids, either). Most nurses know that new interns have anxiety about call, and most of them will be glad to help you.
fab4fan said:Nurses are not house pets. You don't need to give us treats. Just be respectful and clean up your messes (we're not maids, either). Most nurses know that new interns have anxiety about call, and most of them will be glad to help you.
mysophobe said:Where in his post do you get that he thinks you are house pets? He is banking on the nurses being skillful and knowledgable and hopes they'll help him. The "cream cheese" statement isn't literal.
mysophobe said:We CAN all get along!
Seriously though, it might be because I've had experience on the ancillary side of the fence, but I never saw any reason to be mean or short with any nurses or techs or anything. I know a lot of people do, and it kind of embarrasses me, but whatever floats your boat, I guess.