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funkless said:Take this for what it's worth (I start M3 in a month and am basing this solely on word of mouth), but I hear that sick days are rarely a problem, but only if:
1. You're contagious; i.e., are a significant risk to your patients
2. You *ask* your attending and your chief resident
3. You've arranged for coverage prior to asking for leave
I imagine that it depends largely on the service and on the illness itself. I.e., if you contract some transmissible alien death flu the day before you begin your NICU rotation, you'll likely be asked to stay far away (preferably across state lines). But if you're doing outpatient peds and you have gastroenteritis, you'll probably be expected to show up, since apparently Peds = diarrhea; just be sure to wash your hands. (Inpatient peds is another story.)
Maybe someone with actual clinical experience can affirm/refute this...
J DUB said:While you are rotating through clinicals, what happens if you get sick and can't come in? Is it a big deal? Just curious as to what the drill is because everyone gets sick. Thanks for the insight to those that reply.

Samoa said:It pisses me off when my classmates come in sick. I think it's unprofessional to care more about your image than you care about your patients' and colleagues' health.
But I realize I'm probably in a small minority on this.
If you're truly not replaceable even for a day, then alright, come in, and do what you can to protect the rest of us from your germs. But from what I've seen so far, there's NOBODY whose work can't be covered for a day or two.

njbmd said:To avoid getting the "kiddie crud": Wash your hands and put a gown/gloves on before picking up the little people. Use gloves if you change a diaper or wipe a runny nose. During RSV season, wear a mask in addition to wearing gloves/gown.
For big people: Wash your hands between patients and clean the head of your stethoscope with anti-germicidal cleaner (Clorox wipes or Lysol wipes) not an alcohol wipe.
njbmd 🙂
pillowhead said:It really depends on the rotation. I was pretty sick on my first rotation of the year--Surgery--and come hell or high water, I had to be there at 5:00am 6 mornings a week and stay till the end. Unless you had a very high fever or were literally vomitting or having diarrhea on the hour every hour, there was no way you could take a day off.
I've been sick on my Psych rotation. I went in, opened my mouth and out came my raspy voice and everyone was like "Go home. Leave. Why are you here?" I just took the one day off and slept all day which was very much appreciated. Honestly, if you feel like total crap, you're not helping anyone by showing up. You'll just spread it to the rest of the team and the patients. But if a resident or attending insists you show up, what are you going to do? Argue with them?![]()
Adcadet said:On surgery I developed hematuria one morning and was cleared to see my doc in the afternoon, and was diagnosed with a kidney stone. The next day I was in pain requiring oral narcotics and my chief resident told me to stay home. The next day my attendings were cool about letting me know I could leave if I needed to. So much for all surgeons being jerks. 🙂
xaelia said:3. You, the student, are paying for medical school. You are paying for the opportunity to educate yourself and train yourself so that you can pass the licensing exams and become a competent doctor. If you're not going to learn anything from a day where you're so zombified that you can't do any good, or you're contagious enough you could bring down your team or infect your patients, just do the smart thing and stay home. Sleep, eat, watch TV, read over some notes, go to the health center and get antibiotics, etc. Don't worry about it. Medical school isn't meant to weed out the weak by Draconian adherence to some kind of attendance quota.
J DUB said:While you are rotating through clinicals, what happens if you get sick and can't come in? Is it a big deal? Just curious as to what the drill is because everyone gets sick. Thanks for the insight to those that reply.

LanceArmstrong said:You know what they do to sick horses on the farm... it's called "putting them down" 😱
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jojo14 said:If you are constantly vomiting, I think that would be criteria to stay home too.
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Samoa said:And see, surgery is the rotation where you most need to stay home if your sick.
Wow, that almost sounds like academic dishonesty to me.xaelia said:There's a girl at my school who has been taking coumadin for a few months, and she periodically uses it to take off early from clinic, short call, etc. She calls it "pulling the coumadin card." Crappy. I was on a 1-month psych rotation with her, and she missed like 3 days for various personal reasons.
Some people, I'm not sure if they're cut out for it....
gunit07 said:on peds, i actually vomitted once during morning report and once during rounds. needless to say, i had to go home. (especially since one of my patients was totally immunocompromised.)
my evaluation from my intern: "Student left early once because of illness. Other students noticed the absence and thought it unfair to them."
and she checked yes for the box for "does this student's conduct need further review?"
(keep in mind that the attendings and senior resident wrote great evals.)
maybe i should have just puked on her?
and i love how the other students thought it was unfair to them... did they want to be sick too??? it's not like they had to go see my patients or write my notes for me. jerks!
but that was peds.
i actually called in sick once on gen med and they were soooo nice about it 🙂 and actually cared the next day when i came in - not about the missed time, but about my health. best team ever🙂
it totally does depend on your team. on neuro, the sub-i had to leave a couple hours early one day to go pick up his girlfriend from the airport, and he still got honors🙂

xaelia said:There's a girl at my school who has been taking coumadin for a few months, and she periodically uses it to take off early from clinic, short call, etc. She calls it "pulling the coumadin card." Crappy. I was on a 1-month psych rotation with her, and she missed like 3 days for various personal reasons.
beary said:Why on earth would anybody need to miss work for taking coumadin? I used to take coumadin and it didn't make me sick or anything. Maybe if you were like bleeding out and had to go to the ER or something. 🙄
xaelia said:There's a girl at my school who has been taking coumadin for a few months, and she periodically uses it to take off early from clinic, short call, etc. She calls it "pulling the coumadin card." Crappy. I was on a 1-month psych rotation with her, and she missed like 3 days for various personal reasons.
Some people, I'm not sure if they're cut out for it....