Med Student Mafia: The July Effect

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июн 2022
  • July in the hospital is a team effort

Комментарии • 659

  • @zarasamuels9377
    @zarasamuels9377 Год назад +5219

    Never thought the phase 'do you have a research projects, we could help you with' could sound so menacing

    • @pinkprincessinthecity1177
      @pinkprincessinthecity1177 Год назад +132

      As someone who has been part of many research projects, I have to say the menacing inflection in the tone was piece de resistance in delivery.
      It was bloody brilliant and fantastic to hear. 😁

    • @naureenr.s.4065
      @naureenr.s.4065 Год назад +9

      Aaaaaahhhhhh Noooo!

    • @veraserah
      @veraserah Год назад +53

      I'm about to start med school and will soon be housemates with second year residents who are YOUNGER than me (lol, my billions of gap years in research) so you can imagine their relief when they heard I could help them with their research projects they don't have the time for!

    • @Lisa4U7Aaron_Modahl
      @Lisa4U7Aaron_Modahl Год назад +7

      Perfect ending. Toddlers.

    • @Lisa4U7Aaron_Modahl
      @Lisa4U7Aaron_Modahl Год назад +13

      @@veraserah Well hello, Jonathanesse to be. Let them pay coming and going.

  • @swagmassa6702
    @swagmassa6702 Год назад +3564

    ER Nurse here. I will say with confidence that newer docs actually do a lot more shit for a pt. Sometimes unecessary labs but they will work up every patient that comes in. Which in a way is very annoying but as far as care goes, they really do cover a lot of the bases

    • @ArtMandelin
      @ArtMandelin Год назад +816

      "Why the hell did the damn intern order an -- oh shit, it's positive."

    • @ricebeansrockroll882
      @ricebeansrockroll882 Год назад +257

      As a pt used to be dismissed for very real issues I can confidently say that most of the drs that have actually pushed to give me care and a diagnosis, have been newer drs.
      (And once you have that diagnosis the olders drs cant dismiss you as easily).

    • @reynardop7615
      @reynardop7615 Год назад +42

      Hey a lil out of topic, but since u are a fellow ER nurse,
      Do u guys treat Med student like shit over there too ?

    • @blank_line
      @blank_line Год назад +110

      @@reynardop7615 as a med student, I wanna ask. Why do you do this to us? We just want to learn.

    • @yoshikw269
      @yoshikw269 Год назад +7

      The goddamn lactics and blood cultures.

  • @play3rthr339
    @play3rthr339 Год назад +843

    My little brother's Dress syndrome was diagnosed by a doc fresh out of school, who actually did their thesis on it, hence how they knew what it was. It's a very rare and severe reaction to medication with a roughly 10% mortality rate, so we're very thankful that this doc had been able to diagnose it and treat him.

    • @karthik_silkroads
      @karthik_silkroads Год назад +18

      what was the reaction? glad it worked out!

    • @user-wu7ug4ly3v
      @user-wu7ug4ly3v Год назад +57

      @@karthik_silkroadsDRESS = Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms. Usually huge rash, organ involvement and eosinophilia. Lymph nodes usually involved.

    • @brandonhorwath6351
      @brandonhorwath6351 Год назад +14

      Was his name Jonathan?

    • @NMS409
      @NMS409 Год назад +30

      That doc was probably so excited that she got to care for a patient that had the syndrome she did her thesis on.

    • @theresamariascholz6176
      @theresamariascholz6176 8 месяцев назад +7

      Actually studies have shown that beginners do better in diagnostics. As a patient you have the ideal treatment if a beginner does the diagnostics and an experienced doc does the therapy.

  • @DavianPrime
    @DavianPrime Год назад +1521

    This feels like those times when you come up with a great comeback way after an argument ends, so you made it into a youtube skit instead.

    • @mausm7534
      @mausm7534 Год назад +51

      I just realized that was an option! I'm off to make comics about every witty remark I thought of days after the conversation

    • @DavianPrime
      @DavianPrime Год назад +34

      @@mausm7534 Im pretty sure this is like 90% of how all writing works, so go for it! The rest is making up names for things.

    • @annebruecks7381
      @annebruecks7381 Год назад +1

      ​@@bamidele4383 Can you explain further?

  • @CarrieMK
    @CarrieMK Год назад +1332

    As a patient, I love getting seen by newer doctors. I’ve spent decades seeing doctors, having my concerns dismissed. Residents have actually listened to me, provided care, and even helped me get diagnoses for problems that my doctors had been minimizing for decades. My life has improved substantially because of the care that new doctors have provided.

    • @icecrystal34
      @icecrystal34 Год назад +51

      I know right! Same! I would be an entirely different annd probably more miserable person without the care I received from my family doctor when she was still a resident

    • @PhoenixRoseYT
      @PhoenixRoseYT Год назад +96

      As a current med student, as the years go by, we are taught to value the patient above all else. I can’t speak for MD schools, but my DO school is VERY strict about humanistics and they teach us that while you don’t need to order every test in the book, you do need to fully investigate a patient’s complaint when they come in and take an active partnership with the patient. Our professors would regularly tell us “take your hand off the door and EXAMINE THE PATIENT”. So hopefully as time goes on, the new generations of doctors will be more and more dedicated to finding answers and providing top quality care.

    • @CarrieMK
      @CarrieMK Год назад +60

      @@PhoenixRoseYT I think that your generation of healthcare workers can completely change how women and especially POC view and interact with healthcare. One good interaction can’t undo decades of trauma, but it will certainly make a huge difference for the patient and they may be more likely to seek care (especially from you) in the future. That is huge.

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Год назад +13

      @@PhoenixRoseYT Love this. This is a big part of why I plan to go to DO school. It makes sense that practitioners who are helping keep palpation alive would also appreciate the broader importance of being present with the patient and properly SEEING them. I don't suppose you happen to feel like sharing which DO school you're at and how you're enjoying it, do you?

    • @MoonLitChild
      @MoonLitChild Год назад +46

      It was a younger, newer doctor who diagnosed my fibromyalgia off the bat even though it took a year and a half to get an official diagnosis. Most importantly: shew gave my father and I the vocabulary to describe what we thought was happening to older, more stubborn doctors, some who didn't even believe fibromyalgia was a real thing. I'll always remember and be grateful to her, even though I didn't see her long enough to learn her name.

  • @areading12
    @areading12 Год назад +1966

    “You just took a journal club right to the face, Doc!” Has got to be one of the most inspiring student comebacks I’ve ever witnessed. 👏👏👏 Thank you as always for your service.

    • @elycanada6051
      @elycanada6051 Год назад +11

      I definitely shouldn’t send full professors multiple review articles showing why I’m right. But if I ever do, I’m using that line.

    • @sosukelele
      @sosukelele Год назад +2

      @@elycanada6051 it's all about having it and not needing it

    • @andromedatonks60
      @andromedatonks60 Год назад +3

      As a grad student I am absolutely folding this into my everyday vocabulary. Source contradicts my findings? I can’t get access to the paper I need in time? Someone already wrote the paper I wanted to write? “Oh man, I just took a journal club right to the face.”

  • @averykf3839
    @averykf3839 Год назад +440

    Seriously, I was hospitalized for an severe allergic reaction on July 1st once and it was one of the most compassionate healthcare experiences I’ve ever received. I felt super safe despite having just experienced a life-threatening event, and my mom remarked “damn, they’re training those residents well.” Best of luck to all the new interns starting this month!

  • @AB-ir4ic
    @AB-ir4ic Год назад +710

    "Do you have any research projects I could help you with" - as someone who's been hunting for research opportunities for the past year - I can conclusively say that is your best closing statement doc!

  • @manojipereira9169
    @manojipereira9169 Год назад +747

    Thank you for this! A family member's cancer diagnosis was diagnosed by a first year resident (after multiple previous ER visits), so junior learners shouldn't be dismissed for lack of experience

    • @3mwa
      @3mwa Год назад +55

      Exactly! It's the ones who become jaded and calloused that are truly dangerous. And the ones that refuse to retire and are still practicing medicine at 80 despite cognitive decline.

    • @Ice.muffin
      @Ice.muffin Год назад +9

      @@3mwa So true. Good to see others realize this as well.

    • @krisherman3513
      @krisherman3513 Год назад +7

      I get my primary care through the resident clinic. The residents are enthusiastic and close to the current literature. I have seen residents and med students catch thinks missed by other doctors because they still do a complete physical exam. Plus I get the attending. Two doctors for the price of one.

  • @fitz7663
    @fitz7663 Год назад +115

    My mom's office just got a new med student a few days ago. First day they're there, patient had something really weird going on with their poop, med student immediately (and correctly!) knew what rare worm they have. New docs are treasures! They remember all the esoteric stuff that med school teaches.

  • @imperiwinkle1453
    @imperiwinkle1453 Год назад +377

    Glad to see the Support_Bill army expanding. His mom, the med students, hopefully the new interns and junior residents. Hope he gets a break..... atleast for a cup of coffee.

    • @alona270
      @alona270 Год назад +10

      Or a real salary

    • @sekarnaradhita4498
      @sekarnaradhita4498 Год назад +9

      btw I think some seniors like Psych and Palliative Care is supporting Bill too in their own ways - is just he has problems with Cardiologist and Surgeon ig

    • @billdoetsch
      @billdoetsch Год назад +2

      Me too!

  • @christinajackson2662
    @christinajackson2662 Год назад +196

    The most amazing physicians I’ve had have been straight out of fellowship. I know that’s a far cry from a new resident, but what it means to me is they’ve had that time to safely make mistakes, learn their specialty and subspecialty, and come out with fresh new information and ideas, while still open to learning.
    I confess the stigma scared me when I learned the new (and only) subspecialist for my son’s rare bone condition was fresh out of fellowship, but he’s been honest about what he does and does not know, actually read the inch-high stack of research papers I presented at our first visit, and even planned to travel with us to observe when my son needed surgery that was going to be out of state. Then, found an expert on this rare and difficult to treat bone disease, and arranged for them to come up to Alaska so we wouldn’t have to leave.
    So bring on the fresh minds and open thinkers. The ones who know they don’t yet know, but are still ready to learn. And congratulations and welcome to the profession, Drs.

    • @angelokeke5376
      @angelokeke5376 Год назад +5

      I hope ur boy is ok now... Best of health to him.

    • @christinajackson2662
      @christinajackson2662 Год назад +8

      @@angelokeke5376 thank you, that’s very kind ❤️. He had to have surgery and his leg is healing slowly, but the surgeon isn’t worried yet. But my son runs around in his brace like everything is right with the world, just as wild as ever. I’m so proud of him 🥰

  • @enchanted1800
    @enchanted1800 Год назад +27

    Let's just say thank heavens for seasoned nurses, every July we'd welcome the new residents and help them on their way, we'd look out for them and make sure they didn't make mistakes. We'd watch them grow and we knew which ones were going to make it through, which ones would fail, and which ones would become fantastic doctors. Residency was absolute hell on these doctors, and I was honored to back them up.

  • @hinatadreamer
    @hinatadreamer Год назад +37

    Wow, as a new starting intern who definitely jokingly made the same statement of “stay away from the hospital patients! We’re here!”, it was actually kinda nice to hear this

  • @lemon7503
    @lemon7503 Год назад +33

    I’m a pharmacy student. One of my classmates brought a really good recommendation to an attending to which he replied “I hope you remember that when you’re filling bottles at Hy-Vee.” She then told it to a new intern and it ended up being changed. Thank you to all the nice interns!

  • @hnmarsh1
    @hnmarsh1 Год назад +49

    Years ago in July, the ER was incredibly busy, but the attending took the time to ask if I'd be okay waiting. There was a particular resident they were worried about supervising, and my injury was about as clean and straight a cut as could be hoped for.
    It was like getting stitches from a hyped up golden retriever puppy.
    They were completely slammed, and the attending and multiple other docs and fellows still took the time to make sure this kid who was determined to be the "BEST. DOCTOR. EVER!!!" didn't maul a patient in his enthusiasm.
    Yeah, the kid totally screwed up a few times. I was the first patient he'd ever worked on. Of course he made mistakes, but with solid supervision it was perfectly safe and I received a very high level of care.

    • @matasa7463
      @matasa7463 Год назад +8

      lol I had a med student at my local ER stab me 6 times and failed to find a vein for IV drip, with the last one resulting in fluids going into places it really shouldn't go (ouch). Not really their fault as my veins are tiny and hard to see.
      That's when the nurse had to step in. One shot, just eyeballing it, perfectly. The med students were gobsmacked. I laughed and told them it's just experience, which they'll get in time.

    • @pembrokelove
      @pembrokelove Год назад +7

      It’s so wonder that you allowed the pup to have you as a patient, and I promise you he’ll remember you through his whole career. I remember the first patient I had who was all mine with no one else but me in charge… well technically the second. The first patient I was ever in charge of all on my own was dead when I entered the room 🤣🤣🤣. Now that was awkward, but once I did all the paperwork and signed the transport orders, then I got to go see my next patient, and I will never forget him or his totally run of the mill wrist injury, because he let me take care of him. Thank you, Russell, wherever life has taken you the last 24 years.

    • @hnmarsh1
      @hnmarsh1 Год назад +3

      @@pembrokelove I do like puppies. They're sweet.
      I have been worked on by a number of residents over the years, but that kid stands out in memory as the only one who was quite so enthusiastic or that any of the attendings worried about quite so much. He was a good kid.

    • @benlabrot9869
      @benlabrot9869 Год назад +1

      @@matasa7463 except they might not because docs don't normally do many injections, the nurses or phlebotimists do it. I trained in ireland and the nurses at that time normally did not do blood draws, or IVs or ABGs or male caths...the junior docs did ALL of them. When there's two medical interns on call for a 300+ bed hospital you just run from bed to bed all night doing bloods and re-siting IVs. Got really, really good at it after the first few thousand ;)

    • @ScubaFanatic60
      @ScubaFanatic60 Год назад +1

      ​@@matasa7463 I have tough veins too. Several times they have to bring in " the specialist" to get an IV started or to take blood
      No fun.

  • @TheLegacyofKingXeno
    @TheLegacyofKingXeno Год назад +18

    From my experience as an intern and professional, sometimes you want the new guy: They're up to date on the newest information/practices in the field, they're usually excited to share what they know with anyone who will listen, and they're trying to make a good impression so they have a tendency to go above and beyond the bare minimum.

  • @WestBloctonDM2
    @WestBloctonDM2 Год назад +29

    True story- did PGY1 (then still called intern year) at 1 hospital, moved across the country (Hubby wanted to go to grad school) to do 2&3; a week before I left, was doing paperwork in ICU & Cards walked by bitching about "having to train new interns next week"; 2 weeks later was on ER in New hospital when a.pt comes in with TIA. Pt from out of town, & guess who his cardiologist was?😁
    I called him & said, "you have 12 perfectly good new interns, you don't have to send pts across the country to me "

    • @narre71
      @narre71 Год назад +14

      I hope the cardiologist consulted the burn unit after that one, damn!

  • @AlexandriaSWest
    @AlexandriaSWest Год назад +63

    A med student doing residency at my rheumatologist diagnosed my at that time rare chronic illnesses of hEDS, at age 6. I'm thankful to that doc every day, even now in my 30s.

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 Год назад +1

      Took til I was 40 to get my dx of vEDS and still docs look it up quietly.

    • @joanhoffman3702
      @joanhoffman3702 Год назад +2

      Hello fellow unicorns! I also have hEDS. I only discovered this two years ago at 66yo. I’m not the only one in my family. Only one person was officially diagnosed. I had to figure it out on my own.

    • @AlexandriaSWest
      @AlexandriaSWest Год назад +2

      @@joanhoffman3702 always nice to find each other in the wild! My diagnosis was early because I was in intense ballet training and about to join the professional company, but my knees hurt all the time. I had completely destroyed both knees and they’re just bone on bone with pretty much no cartilage. They told me if I ever danced again I would be permanently in a wheelchair by age 18 so I stopped dancing. I did go and get 3 black belts after, though!

  • @temi8087
    @temi8087 Год назад +290

    Also, as a UK final year medical student who literally found out yesterday that I'm now a junior doctor, this was really reassuring, thank you😭

    • @gerardacronin334
      @gerardacronin334 Год назад +19

      Congratulations! Welcome to the scariest, most exhausting year of your life. My one piece of advice is to always ask for advice!

    • @vestre9619
      @vestre9619 Год назад +6

      Literally same here, just another country 😅 Congrats 🥳

    • @classicambo9781
      @classicambo9781 Год назад +9

      And meal prep - make sure you are eating at least 4 healthy meals a week.

    • @deepakrajendra8019
      @deepakrajendra8019 Год назад +2

      Congrats! :D

    • @sciencefliestothemoon2305
      @sciencefliestothemoon2305 Год назад

      My condolences. A tough time in the NHS

  • @supenskylesko
    @supenskylesko Год назад +258

    This definitely hit the spot today for me!!! I'm an R.N. and my husband is seriously ill, in the hospital right now. Today the rounding team had a new physician. I could tell that she has been "battered and torn." She had an extremely defensive attitude of trying to impress me with how much she knew, but she was lacking in compassion, and not interested in hearing anything from family. So often I have seen that happen as a personal defense mechanism in young physicians. We need to concentrate more on emotionally nurturing the young ones coming in.

    • @CaitS34
      @CaitS34 Год назад +6

      Emotions just don’t exist in doctors, in my personal experience. Unfortunately your experience is the normal for patients, every day, and I’m sorry you had to go through it, but it’s just the status quo. I’ve been experiencing it for 12 years now, and nothing has changed in that time, things have only gotten a million times worse.

    • @Lucky9_9
      @Lucky9_9 Год назад +9

      When your mind is focused on solving problems quickly, a lot of the time it bypasses the compassion circuits. There's only so much mental bandwidth, and it's hard to have external compassion when your body is devoting so many resources to internal self care.
      Maintaining one's ego WHILE doing all of this eats up every last scrap of bandwidth.. It's self preservation. Once the unfamiliar becomes familiar and the body is less consumed with self protection it can focus more on the care elements.
      Let's be honest, when it comes to priorities there's a reason it's called Health Care, not Care Health. Doesn't matter how much you cared for your patient if they're dead.

    • @CaitS34
      @CaitS34 Год назад +4

      @@Lucky9_9 my mind and body are constantly over worked as well as over run with exhaustion. I always do my best to still be kind, caring and compassionate to others, even when I’m beyond wits end. So they have no excuses in my opinion. They should all try having chronic daily pain for ten plus years, then come crying to me about how difficult it is, to be them.
      Edit: And I do it all, without any ego, half the size of theirs.

    • @Lucky9_9
      @Lucky9_9 Год назад

      @@CaitS34 So your points are that
      1) because YOU are always overrun with exhaustion and can still maintain a compassionate attitude, then everyone else should be and to too
      2) you suffered in pain for a decade, and propose that others should also suffer in pain.
      3) When people tell you they are in pain and suffering, you will have no compassion, instead you will show them your condescension and disdain that they would come to "cry about it" to you (I assume because you believe that this would be justice?)
      4) AND you're incredibly humble.. (But, you're preach-bragging here so... I doubt you're half as humble as you purport)
      Yeah... I don't appreciate your response. Not everyone is you, clearly everyone has a different approach... I sincerely hope you aren't in any customer care field because you sound insufferable... Your perspective sounds like 100% ego talking and you don't even see it...

    • @AstarteElviraLyana
      @AstarteElviraLyana Год назад +9

      @Caitlin I don't think it was trying to start a pissing match of who has it worse. It was an explanation of why it might happen.

  • @BelalAlDroubi
    @BelalAlDroubi Год назад +67

    Omg closing with asking about research projects hit me hard 😂
    So true, I used to go begging to work on projects with docs
    Thankfully, my paper was just published today 😊❤️

  • @brianboyett6250
    @brianboyett6250 Год назад +20

    As a pharmacist I'll say that brand new interns are about the most accepting and teachable people on the planet. I find more problems during their first few months but it never makes it to the patient because that's my job. I call them and we talk about the issue and they learn, or sometimes I learn. Either way the patient is fine

    • @andrefernandes771
      @andrefernandes771 Год назад +4

      This is true! Pharmacist here as well and I do feel like I see way more incorrect orders though because most aren’t familiar with order entry in the EHR and not solely from a lack of knowledge/experience.

  • @KMFerguson
    @KMFerguson Год назад +13

    Thanks for always sticking up for residents! Residents fresh off rotations have saved my father's life twice because they spotted uncommon medical issues that specialists ignored, and I'm always grateful to see residents applying their knowledge and energy to their practice.

  • @monkiram
    @monkiram Год назад +9

    As an intern in the 3rd week of my residency, these comments are warming my heart and making me tear up 🥲 Thank you all for believing is us and being patient while we learn

  • @adventureswithcorrine
    @adventureswithcorrine Год назад +374

    As a RN, I have to say that July was the hardest, most rewarding, most exciting, part of working in a teaching hospital.
    1st, the hard part: switching from teaching patients to teaching new residents.
    2nd, the rewarding part: gaining the trust of residents as they learn that nurses are not a doctor's handmaid but, instead, are a separate specialty that can, and does, practice independently, as they learn the values of collaboration with nursing.
    3rd, the exciting part: being an active part of collaborative health care and influencing future generations of medical partners!
    True story; a 1st year in the ER was tasked with starting an IV by the attending (typically, a task delegated to nursing). The 1st yr confided in me that they had never started an IV and only knew theory. So, I took the 1st and some supplies to a quiet corner and let them have their first experience by starting an IV on me. The 1st was floored (and, succeeded with guidance) that I (a RN) would do that for them.
    I explained that RNs are patient advocates. My primary responsibility to the patient is to prevent harm. Sometimes, that means intervening before a medical partner causes undo pain or harm to a patient.
    The resident DID start that patient IV without harming the patient and, I hope, took a life lesson away with the experience!
    Bring on July!

    • @amylandry4108
      @amylandry4108 Год назад +7

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Год назад +16

      This is awesome. I love that you did that and that you're part of new doctors' training. You're exactly the sort of critical yet supportive influence they need.
      I'm a bit shocked that a new resident was in that position, though. I don't know what's normal for med schools as far as practical skills training, and maybe I'm used to fields that prioritize hands-on work more than others (my exposure so far has been in veterinary med then manual med then emergency response, so) ... but I'm personally blown away that any med school student could graduate and match into residency without having at least placed an IV. I barely have any venipuncture practice but at least I've had _something_ besides theory, and I certainly don't want to go to any med school that would let me graduate without getting a little more practice 😳

    • @engagex1
      @engagex1 Год назад +6

      That's epic, bless you

    • @williamsstephens
      @williamsstephens Год назад +2

      ❤️❤️❤️

    • @jadefalcon001
      @jadefalcon001 Год назад +3

      You are amazing!

  • @BombshElle_7
    @BombshElle_7 Год назад +25

    Those are spicy interns. Doc's gonna need some milk

  • @mixiearmadillo7452
    @mixiearmadillo7452 Год назад +115

    Kick some ass, kids. We nurses are rooting for you! Just don't steal our pens, don't forget to check your pain med orders due for renewal, and please be nice when we have to page you at 3am because you forgot to renew your pain med orders. 😘

    • @teslaromans1023
      @teslaromans1023 Год назад +10

      The pen thing…so true…Hospitals are war zones when it comes to pen X)

    • @Re_d20
      @Re_d20 Год назад +9

      Oh gosh I just found a pen in my pocket with someone else’s name( must be one of the nurse’s) and I don’t even remember taking it 😂

    • @everythingreview767
      @everythingreview767 Год назад +3

      Sorry to nurses worldwide for the pen all those pen we accidentally stolen.
      Id be smiling if i go to work with one pen and yet goes home with 2 pens or more. Like its tiring, but definitely a fruitful day, in some way.

    • @angelokeke5376
      @angelokeke5376 Год назад

      That is soooooo true. All the way from Nigeria 🤣🤣🤣😜

    • @benlabrot9869
      @benlabrot9869 Год назад +3

      and DON'T EVER, EVER tell the nurses "because I'm a doctor and youre a nurse and because I say so.' Unless you feel like getting paged every 15 minutes throughout the night.....

  • @Userext47
    @Userext47 Год назад +112

    I'd argue the month of june is more dangerous than july because in july you've got fresh med students with very little bias towards patients, trying their damn hardest to not harm. Whereas in june you've got beat up interns whom after a year of medicine gain a false confidence in themselves which leads to more mistakes.

    • @KatieCottingham
      @KatieCottingham Год назад +1

      1000% agree with this!

    • @eacalvert
      @eacalvert Год назад +3

      Actually that would make a great study!

    • @t.k.3895
      @t.k.3895 Год назад

      Meh. The transition sucks. I hate having a care plan for a patient just fir it to be reworked by the incoming.
      Waste of money.

    • @AmyStylinson
      @AmyStylinson Год назад +1

      @@t.k.3895 then leave teaching hospitals. Residents have to be there, you do not.

  • @georgesanders5380
    @georgesanders5380 Год назад +10

    I love this one, and have to say I actually really like working with new residents. I just spent this last week training residents on how to use our EHR, and they were some of the most enjoyable classes I got to teach. Residents are so attentive and willing to learn, showing them all the ways they can save time when documenting is very rewarding.

  • @kazzmyob
    @kazzmyob Год назад +7

    I'm always happy to see student doctors and nurses as they tend to pay far more attention.

  • @missaniebananie6473
    @missaniebananie6473 7 месяцев назад +1

    In my experience of chronic illness and seeing mostly residents at the hospital, I can say that I have never felt like I was getting sub optimal care. If anything they care so much about helping you in the best way possible that they are willing to take more time and guidance from whomever their attending or consult is. I can’t say enough good things about residents ❤

  • @rainwitchansy
    @rainwitchansy Год назад +14

    Got a thyroidectomy scheduled in a couple weeks - got really stressed to feeling better about it than I already did. Thanks, Dr. G

  • @mzone9591
    @mzone9591 Год назад +45

    I had surgery on my eyes several years back. My surgeon let me know that he would do one eye and his student would do the other, under his supervision. All the outcomes for the eye done by the student were better. Not because he was a better surgeon, but because between the student and the teacher, a lot of care went into everything he did during that surgery.
    It's logical that residents are careful and carefully supervised. The same cannot always be said for doctors with decades under their belts.

    • @classicambo9781
      @classicambo9781 Год назад

      That's certainly scary but got to learn somehow. I just know how much it would screw up my life if it went wrong and I lost depth perception. Happy it went well for you.

    • @renoia3067
      @renoia3067 Год назад

      2 pairs of eyes are always better than just 1. sorry you have lopsided results lol

  • @foxw875
    @foxw875 Год назад +2

    I watch your channel for the laughs, but this is one of the skits that just makes me respect you even more. If I could double subscribe I'd do it right now!

  • @bektasbirben6077
    @bektasbirben6077 Год назад +1

    My doctor's office has a residency program every time I have an appointment, I meet a new resident. It's really great to all these people working towards their medical profession.

  • @sayurimei
    @sayurimei Год назад +1

    as a fellow colleague and as a patient, I can vouch for the amazing empathy and honest interest that freshly graduated medics have shown towards me and my multiple rare conditions. They took their time to get a good history and they actually listened when I explained my health conditions. I always felt I was more care for when I had an intern and a resident caring for me that when I was pushed to be under the care of the attending since (depending the specialty) they didn't even bother to acknowledge the patients during rounds. Heck some didn't even acknowledge me when I was doing rounds with them when I was the register clinical dietitian in charge of the floor. 😒

  • @julielee3812
    @julielee3812 Год назад +5

    I enjoy every single thing you post, but your bit on waiting for match day, the scramble and this one for new residents were so very kind. I appreciate what you do. I’ve been a family doc for 30 years, I’ve been married to an ER doc for 25 years, my brother in law is a radiologist, my best friend is a neurologist, and my fabulous nephew is in his 4th day of an emergency medicine residency so these have been especially timely.

  • @temi8087
    @temi8087 Год назад +12

    Ooooh self-burn! Those are rare!
    Plastics will definitely need to see him for reconstruction after that😂

  • @Helen3691
    @Helen3691 Год назад +12

    Congrats to all the newbies out there! It’s a G-damn tough job. Stay kind to your support team and they’ll work their butts off for you and your patients. ❤️

  • @dickrebel
    @dickrebel Год назад +1

    I'm a chronic pain patient, organ, not neurological. nothing but opioids works. I've tried everything including celiac plexus blocks.
    But your videos are so pithy and on point. I hope your fellows watch. You are hilarious. And you accurately lampoon the entire hospital system. Keep it up. You give me some hope that via humor something might change.
    Be well.

  • @akku97
    @akku97 Год назад +35

    “Do you have any research projects we can help you with” 💀💀

    • @claw836
      @claw836 Год назад +1

      Someone explain why this is funny !

    • @neelparmar6690
      @neelparmar6690 Год назад +2

      @@claw836 after tearing their senior apart, they’re now asking for a favour from him.
      It is common for junior doctors to supplement work with research to increase their standing when applying for future positions.

    • @Takoonv
      @Takoonv Год назад

      @@claw836 You need to submit one research to complete residency training.Bill is now in his second year of training if he still have zero research going i can assure you he is f that rhyme the ducked.

  • @TikoVerhelst
    @TikoVerhelst Год назад +2

    "On wednesdays we wear pink scrubs"
    I want the Med Student Mafia to use this line once. Thanks in advance!

  • @aland7236
    @aland7236 7 месяцев назад +1

    It took a significant medical event for my Dad to finally listen to me when I explained for the 50th time in something like 20 years that the "Teaching Hospital" at the University in town was not having their Medical Students run wild on their own without supervision.

  • @MrsSaxophonegirl
    @MrsSaxophonegirl Год назад +3

    I actually am supposed to get my gallbladder out this month and at the beginning of your video I was thinking “maybe I should move my surgery…” but at the end I felt a lot better. Thanks for making a great point.

  • @dreamwolf7302
    @dreamwolf7302 Год назад +5

    I would say that new residents, in my experience, are more likely to spot something the experienced doctors miss, because they are paranoid about missing something.
    I've seen a new resident, a week in, realize a patient was presenting with a rare series of symptoms linked to a slow bleeding brain aneurysm. Saved the patients life as the on duty doc wrote it off initially as heat exhaustion and PMS, which in fairness, the symptoms DID match, and you typically wont jump to the extreme conclusion. Quick Head CT, and the patient was off to surgery ASAP.

  • @brielle5816
    @brielle5816 Год назад +6

    Don’t forget about the nurses! We look over a lot of the orders new docs put in and assess their appropriateness! New docs are also more open to suggestions and actually put in their own orders 😂

  • @Tyfreaky13
    @Tyfreaky13 Год назад +2

    This needs to be a real thing in every hospital AND they definately need to help out poor Bill more, he could use the breaks.

  • @tkay821
    @tkay821 Год назад +4

    I worked in a academic hospital for 20 years (neuro IR tech) July is when the support staff catch all the mistakes before it reaches the patient. That month puts everyone on their toes and refreshes their memories on the basics......like CPR recertification.
    On the topic of neuro specialties, the clash between neurosurgeons and neuro interventionalists is pretty epic.
    Don't get me started with vascular IR and neuro IR......the disdain between those two is palpable.
    As a neuro IR tech scrubbing in a vascular case it is similar to a neat freak living with a slob......the bubbles in the syringes makes me twitchy

  • @bluebrocade
    @bluebrocade Год назад +3

    Thank you for posting this! Perfect timing! I'm supposed to haver surgery in July and a friend was telling me to watch out for this very thing. It was not something I had never heard before and really didn't need to add it to my list of worries. I'm going to forget all about it now.

  • @HelloEunny
    @HelloEunny Год назад +1

    I’ve never looked into journals or actual research but I’m more distracted by the beautiful color coded bookshelf 😂

  • @yunicelennar7626
    @yunicelennar7626 Год назад +27

    Oh I love when the students have Bill’s back!

  • @jjk4891
    @jjk4891 Год назад +12

    A fresh doctor actually helped diagnose a condition for my uncle once. He had no idea what’s wrong with his eye sight (started having tunnel vision on one eye) for months after visiting all sorts of hospitals. One day he went to a larger university hospital and the doctor still had no idea. As soon as he was leaving the floor, a young resident who was helping the doctor on the side rushed to him showing a text book page saying that this might be somewhere we can start looking into. Tbh it was a nerve problem that doesn’t have a real cure but they found out that it should be something that would get better with time. My uncle is now fine and the resident’s knowledge relieved a lot of stress off him while he was recovering his vision!

    • @renoia3067
      @renoia3067 Год назад

      how wonderful!! what a sweet young resident!!!

  • @TickleMeElmo55
    @TickleMeElmo55 Год назад +1

    This hits real close to home for me because I was in the ER who was later admitted into inpatient in early August of this year. A PGY1 was part of my team as well as a med student.

  • @duffexport408
    @duffexport408 Год назад +7

    So while yes the "July effect" in at large does not seem to affect mortality it has in some cases been linked to morbidity (greater incidence of postoperative thromboses and surgical site infection), longer hospitalization and slower ER turnarounds.
    That being said, it's normal. Everyone has to start somewhere. The more senior staff is aware, and we generally try to avoid situations were the fresh out of med school R1 will have to make a life or death situation. But it's also more draining for the rest of the staff to try to catch all the mistakes made in July-August.
    As an ICU pharmacist working this 1st of July weekend, I did have to gently explain prescription rules to the new R1 who decided to prescribe chemotherapy cause he read it on uptodate.

  • @theneurophile
    @theneurophile Год назад

    Genius. Pure genius! We Stroke attendings are used to very close behind the scenes resident supervision 24-7-365. So, July is no different than any other month.

  • @joshuazarbl2646
    @joshuazarbl2646 Год назад +1

    Dude you are on fire right now, these recent videos are absolute gems!!
    I keep showing your videos to other students/physicians when some dumb stuff happens and is a burden on them - good thing you provide material describing so many different situations, it is really relieving PLUS it is funny as hell.
    Thank you so much, keep doing what your doing humor-bro.

  • @chrystalraymondperry3356
    @chrystalraymondperry3356 Год назад

    I love how every book behind him is color coded!! I love organization!!

  • @kristenglasgow3761
    @kristenglasgow3761 Год назад +2

    New interns are great and we were all there once, but as an attending, July might be a safe month but damn is it exhausting. Yes you do have to double check EVERYTHING. Great interns let you know everything they do which makes our job so much easier, but it is the ones that think they know it all or can practice independently that give attendings a run for their money. I have caught a lot of things just this past week and all I can emphasize is if you don’t know then ask. If you think you know, PLEASE ASK. We def shouldn’t say that patients are any less safe in July but to the friends and family of attending doctors everywhere…please understand why we may be a little extra exhausted (more than normal) over this next month or so.

  • @gabebenson6105
    @gabebenson6105 Год назад +1

    Had kidney stones last year and it was the residents who swung by that treated me the best. On duty nurse literally told me to stop belly aching while I was struggling through the pain with 0 medication. When they finally gave me morphine they ended up giving me too little for my body weight and it took the new guys to figure out

  • @pinkprincessinthecity1177
    @pinkprincessinthecity1177 Год назад +36

    •Please be nice and civil to the all healthcare professionals at the hospital, especially the interns. Being a new doctor can be quite overwhelming.
    Everyone is just trying their best to make it through the day. Patients are stressed and scared...and, to varying degrees, so are the people. providing care.
    Note to fellows and attendings , please be kind to the interns and residents. Teaching is hard and it can get frustrating , but remember...you were once in their position, being pimped and so much more.
    At the end, we are all in it together to get through the wild ecosystem known as "the hospital".
    •As someone who has been in hospitals many times over the years AND as someone who has read the info/data referred in this video , throughout the year, all over the country, I have to say that July is NOT a standout month.
    The only times of the year where there may be issues with care , as stated here, is during the holidays and weekends , in general. Hospitals will always provide standard of care. But it is tougher to do, with a smaller staff for so many are taking time off on those days. Even with that, you eventually will be seen and taken care of.

  • @jonirnmomba4130
    @jonirnmomba4130 Год назад +2

    July- The month we ED nurses teach new nurses how to label CSF and tube Color’s of tests that are only once a year.

  • @Michelleiscul
    @Michelleiscul Год назад +2

    Dang! Been a while since we've had a med student mafia! Keep 'em coming!

  • @amandamaffa5348
    @amandamaffa5348 Год назад +25

    Thank you for being a wonderful, supportive mentor to all of us in the medical field!!

  • @anneowsowitz4269
    @anneowsowitz4269 Год назад +1

    The nurses are making sure that the patients are safe!

  • @karinaszloda6703
    @karinaszloda6703 Год назад +3

    Slap in your face!!🤣😂🤣😂 you are so smart doc!!👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @hannahboone6665
    @hannahboone6665 Год назад

    I love all your videos, but Med Student Mafia ones are hands down my favorite.

  • @congruentcrib
    @congruentcrib Год назад +1

    Damn… he really hit hard with that
    If anything, I would imagine there would be increase of quality work because you now have more eyes looking at you and taking care of you.

  • @FutureAIDev2015
    @FutureAIDev2015 8 месяцев назад

    I love the Med Student Mafia's passive-aggressive approach!

  • @TheArora3
    @TheArora3 Год назад +4

    These was a study which showed improved patient outcome during conference weeks; it was postulated that it is because all the senior people are at conferences giving presentations so patients get more up-to-date care from junior attending and RESIDENTS ( dum..dum..dum.. Suspenseful music)..Very interesting results

    • @matasa7463
      @matasa7463 Год назад

      All that new blood also does mean there are now more hands on deck.

  • @katierasburn9571
    @katierasburn9571 Год назад +7

    Congrats to the new docs! As a radiographer all i ask is that you please write a proper clinical summary for your xray requests (no pain is not sufficient) and for the love of medicine send them round with a wristband on 😅

    • @classicambo9781
      @classicambo9781 Год назад

      Patient ID should be admissions and nursing staff responsibilities, not Drs. It is in Australia anyway.

  • @tspark123
    @tspark123 11 месяцев назад

    “You just took a journal club right to the face, Doc”😅😂😂😂😂😂

  • @marka9158
    @marka9158 Год назад

    so excellent, never forgot my first July as intern. Chief Surgical resident just said " as long as you try and I can fix it, no worries...."

  • @gmkbelanger
    @gmkbelanger Год назад

    This is my new favourite video on RUclips. No. On the Internet. Talk about Wish Fulfillment! Sooooooo satisfying. *happy sigh* Thank you. ❤️ from Canada

  • @samanthagibson5791
    @samanthagibson5791 Год назад +1

    I did my pre-registration training in a hospital and we knew when the new junior doctors started writing prescriptions as we'd get the same type of error over and over again until we phoned all of them and some really odd and strange errors as well. But we caught them and fixed them, it was kind of annoying, but we knew they had a lot to learn. Also it made great evidence for my own training.

  • @lyokomajor
    @lyokomajor Год назад

    I love it when the Surgeon just says "Yeah. Ok." when admitting defeat.

  • @kidsis
    @kidsis Год назад +1

    My last hospital stay was at a teaching hospital and I preferred it; a student is more likely to have recently learned something so they are more likely to look at more possibilities than a doc that's been around for a while. Not to mention that even experienced staff is more likely to let the student perform/order more diagnostics than they would as a teaching exercise.

  • @renataveloso5978
    @renataveloso5978 Год назад

    'Do you have any research projects we could help you with'
    I choked on my coffee.

  • @kaitlyncocuzzo607
    @kaitlyncocuzzo607 Год назад

    Residents if you are reading this every word is true. Your students for your back 💯.
    Thanks for all you do for us

  • @tmellis8
    @tmellis8 Год назад

    You’re always so on point.

  • @KillingKunoichi
    @KillingKunoichi Год назад +2

    Thank you so much for this. Just finished my first duty as a 4th year med student and.. it’s an adjustment.

  • @LakeGael
    @LakeGael Год назад +15

    I actually always thought the opposite. Getting a younger, possibly newer doctor makes me feel like they're more interested and fresh into the field so they'd be more inclined to listen to me and run different tests. Older and more experienced doctors are fine too, I just prefer someone who's less likely to be burnt out.

  • @ninjason57
    @ninjason57 Год назад +3

    Gotta transfer him to the BURN center!

  • @31dknight
    @31dknight Год назад +1

    Another great video from the doctor. Thanks

  • @annaj7058
    @annaj7058 Год назад

    Dr Glaucomflecken and the Med School Mafia always having our backs as Junior Docs from Internship onwards

  • @danibosner6537
    @danibosner6537 Год назад +2

    As a lab tech, we can Always tell when july hits and the baby doctors are ordering

    • @sunkrizt6863
      @sunkrizt6863 Год назад +2

      Stat blood culture? 🤦‍♀️

    • @danibosner6537
      @danibosner6537 Год назад +2

      @@sunkrizt6863 Yes. Also repeat orders, and ordering an entire panel one test at a time

  • @oracleofthemundane9593
    @oracleofthemundane9593 Год назад +42

    July. I have rather fond memories for making massive amounts of coffee for the new interns when I was a humble clerk in Pediatrics. And the residents making jokes about "How long have you had this discharge?" (You had to be there.)

  • @LeadTrumpet1
    @LeadTrumpet1 Год назад +18

    I just avoid hospitals on July 4th weekend because there are too many people who think explosives are toys, too many people who aren’t responsible with alcohol, and too many people who drive recklessly. Often a combo of the three.
    I’m not worried about interns, I’m worried about people making poor life decisions clustered on the same weekend dragging out ER wait times. This goes into Tuesday for all the people who refuse to go to an ER on a holiday.
    Interns are willing to learn, which this medical zebra greatly appreciates.

    • @noodle3218
      @noodle3218 Год назад

      While I totally agree with your points, if you need the ER, do you really have a choice as to when you go? My ER visits have unfortunately been urgent type things.
      But you may be talking about elective surgeries and then I gotcha.

    • @erikscott5709
      @erikscott5709 Год назад +2

      You call it "July 4th weekend", we call it "another day in the south".

  • @giraffesinc.2193
    @giraffesinc.2193 Год назад

    Lord, I just started working at a teaching hospital (RN at Loma Linda) and have been forewarned. July babies, bring it on!

  • @user-lr7vq8ru4l
    @user-lr7vq8ru4l Год назад

    Havin so much fun reading comments - you sparked a whole new dimension : Bills go & save the day!

  • @wolftango6084
    @wolftango6084 Год назад

    By far my favorite mini series :D

  • @supaswimma4
    @supaswimma4 Год назад

    Needed this the night before my first shift of intern year!!! Wish me luck!!

  • @moeaftab
    @moeaftab Год назад

    As someone who just started as an intern, I thank you for this video

  • @NS-kj2sc
    @NS-kj2sc Год назад +1

    I LOVE THE FOURTH YEAR MED STUDENT CHARACTERS HAHAHAHA

  • @kelseir5686
    @kelseir5686 Год назад

    I love you!!❤ this was awesome.

  • @Iggygetz
    @Iggygetz Год назад +1

    As a nurse, we watch orders regardless. Doesn't matter if you're an intern, or a senior attending, or a nurse; none of us are perfect, and we are all looking for best outcomes. Had an attending order 1L 40 mEq K NS wide open, I hung it at 250 an hour, and asked the doc to fix the order. Good outcome, respectful communication both ways, everyone wins.

  • @f_r_e_d
    @f_r_e_d Год назад +1

    A new highly energetic aspiring doc > a mediocre has been

  • @markkennedy9767
    @markkennedy9767 Год назад

    These are amazing sketches.

  • @shesaidsomething1
    @shesaidsomething1 Год назад

    "Journal Club right to the face". Oh lord. 🤣😂🤣

  • @DarkMycena
    @DarkMycena Год назад

    I want more med student mafia, I especially love when they defend Dr.Bill and treat him so nicely