impending doom
Oct. 24th, 2007 10:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
My patient told me that [they] were going to die. I had come up to see them as they were having some difficulties and not getting better with the treatments that I had ordered over the phone. Patient looked anxious and uncomfortable, but vitals signs were stable and were certainly nothing to worry about. I ordered some tests and stayed there, while we started some treatments, reassuring that everything was okay and to just calm down. And I watched, horrified, as eyes rolled back into the head and the lungs stopped taking in breaths. Within seconds, the pulse was gone as well.
This is the second time that a patient has died in front of me and it felt like deja vu (really starting to dread the 5-6 o'clock hour). I felt only slightly more competent this time, listening for breath sounds, feeling for a pulse, directing the chest compressions. The medical ICU team was there within minutes and took over directing the code. I won't go into any more details as to what happened next, because this is flirting close enough to HIPAA noncompliance, but as always, it's really causing me to doubt me as a physician. I want to do critical care, but I just feel like a fish out of water in these situations. I know that it's lack of experience, but there's a big part of me that instantly defers when others arrive on the scene, and that's wrong. I should be taking charge. I should know enough that I'm making decisions instantaneously--that why we learn the algorithms so it becomes second nature. And of course, there's that part of me eating me up inside, wondering what I should have done sooner, faster. I chalked up the complaints to anxiety, when there was something seriously wrong. Am I that bad on my assessments? Even looking back, I still think that that I would have acted in same if I did it over again and that's not good.
I was going to write more about my date tonight, but I got three hours of sleep this afternoon and I am utterly exhausted. The short version: I had a great time, I like the guy (as in, I haven't found anything yet that is overwhelmingly a turnoff, otherwise, I'm still being cautious), deer hunting is loads of fun, and he gives pretty good hugs. :) Look for more tomorrow.
This is the second time that a patient has died in front of me and it felt like deja vu (really starting to dread the 5-6 o'clock hour). I felt only slightly more competent this time, listening for breath sounds, feeling for a pulse, directing the chest compressions. The medical ICU team was there within minutes and took over directing the code. I won't go into any more details as to what happened next, because this is flirting close enough to HIPAA noncompliance, but as always, it's really causing me to doubt me as a physician. I want to do critical care, but I just feel like a fish out of water in these situations. I know that it's lack of experience, but there's a big part of me that instantly defers when others arrive on the scene, and that's wrong. I should be taking charge. I should know enough that I'm making decisions instantaneously--that why we learn the algorithms so it becomes second nature. And of course, there's that part of me eating me up inside, wondering what I should have done sooner, faster. I chalked up the complaints to anxiety, when there was something seriously wrong. Am I that bad on my assessments? Even looking back, I still think that that I would have acted in same if I did it over again and that's not good.
I was going to write more about my date tonight, but I got three hours of sleep this afternoon and I am utterly exhausted. The short version: I had a great time, I like the guy (as in, I haven't found anything yet that is overwhelmingly a turnoff, otherwise, I'm still being cautious), deer hunting is loads of fun, and he gives pretty good hugs. :) Look for more tomorrow.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-26 07:07 am (UTC)You know though, you sound alot like me. Like, when I start a new job or whatever, its only after a while that I become comfortable enough to get out of my shy shell and take charge. I'm certain that it is just going to take a while, but that soon you will be confident and brave to know what needs/should be done, and step up to execute it properly to be the best doctor. With your entries it sounds like a job that not many people could do, but I think you definitely have what it takes. :)