Just wondering what you all include as part of your work up for delirium?
Just wondering what you all include as part of your work up for delirium?
Just wondering what you all include as part of your work up for delirium?
tsh b12
A note telling the medicine service to do their job.
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it is this sort of attitude for which so many people inside medicine view psychiatry so poorly.....delirium recs are not neurosurgery.
Nobody should leave a note to a service telling them to do their job, but it's the attitude from medicine that tends to dismiss what psychiatry says that's the problem, not the other way round. And delirium recs aren't neurosurgery... so medicine should know how to do them and follow them. Period.
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Thats just because they dont care and dont really believe we have anything to offer.
I Thats just because they dont care and dont really believe we have anything to offer.
At the risk of sounding like a broken record: this is likely a sign that your program's psych department is not very strong.But you are right in that medicine often doesnt read the consult or attempt to follow the consult recs. Thats just because they dont care and dont really believe we have anything to offer.
At the risk of sounding like a broken record: this is likely a sign that your program's psych department is not very strong.
IMHO, hospitals and universities that have a negative view of psychiatry tend to do so because of poor psych leadership, weak psych departments, and below par residents. Strong programs do strong work which leads to a strong reputation of psych. It's not complicated.
At the risk of sounding like a broken record: this is likely a sign that your program's psych department is not very strong.
IMHO, hospitals and universities that have a negative view of psychiatry tend to do so because of poor psych leadership, weak psych departments, and below par residents. Strong programs do strong work which leads to a strong reputation of psych. It's not complicated.
My gripe was more to point out that delirium is a MEDICAL Issue and not a psychiatric issue, contrary to popular opinion.
Where did the idea that psychiatrists should manage delirium come from?
A note telling the medicine service to do their job.
It depends on the clinical picture, but in general ...
Vitals review, CBC, CMP, UA, UDS, LFT, detailed medication review, NH4+, CXR, CT non-con, +/- MRI, +/- EEG. Once the consult service is called, I have found that medicine has typically not done the med review. They usually don't know the P450 interactions all that well.
The most noticeable symptoms of delirium are behavioral and cognitive. Why wouldn't we be involved?