It is also one of the biggest reasons for burnout among Army Officers as well. I think the main reason for both is because you are told to think outside the box and be a good leader but when you want to think for yourself Admin Staff above you restrict you to unrealistic expectations, policies, and metrics. You have people who know nothing (or very little) about your scenario or job and just want to chase the paper.
I had Dr Zhang at Jefferson ER this past May. Best Er doc I ever had. I felt he really cared. Very professional, intelligent, personable, and detail oriented. It was super busy and he was taking care of a large amt of patients.
This doc’s entire demeanor changes when he started talking about GETTING to mentor and teach! Way to respect and maturely solve observed negatives that everyone will deal with inevitably. Live a life worth living, and be grateful for the opportunities themselves, good and bad 🎉
Good afternoon Dr Zang the interviewer Zac Highley is skilled enough to question you about details of your work ethic. It leaves me gobsmacked. The burn out work, alternative of teaching and mentoring for you is so interesting to listen too. Finding a solution. Makes me feel safe and cared for. Thank you 😊 💓 from NZ Downunder
You hit on a strong point when you said “what if you never tried emergency medicine?”. I think of this a lot. In regards to everything. What if you never tried violin? What if you never tried baseball? Mathematics at a serious level? Theoretical physics? Politics? And so on. It’s something interesting to think about that transcends careers.
I’m watching all your interview series Zach, and I want to tell you how inspiring these are, how lucky you ate having so amazing teachers. If you have a cardiology teacher ready for your an interview would be amazing :)
Was just reading a CBC article mentioning that 1 in 2 doctors experience high levels of burnout - y'all are just amazing. First time coming across your stuff - I'm looking forward to seeing more of your content!
I spent 3 years in an ER during undergrad and I loved it so much. Everything about it. But I love M-F work life. I love having Saturday mornings and Sunday with family. ER is a weird field, it can fit us so well, but the lifestyle can be so rough. I didn’t have to work nights in undergrad so I have no idea what it’s like to shift from nights/days and days/nights. I can imagine it being really rough. I think it’s a lot more rough than some ER docs are truthful about. And plus, we just had an ER doc at our school who I loved, had a massive MI. Idk man, it’s a tough life. We will see! Sad though because I love the field. It’s funny he mentioned Gordon. I wanted to be a cook before medicine. I’m not proud to say this, but I function better under immense stress. I prefer to be yelled at. Sounds crazy to say that 😂. It gets me locked in. Anyway, we will have to wait for 3rd year.
Zach, another great interview and so informative! Do you think you would ever interview a nurse practitioner? I know it strays from your traditional MD/DO content, but I am graduating nursing school and am very interested in being an NP in an ICU down the road!
I hate EM. Can’t convince me that entire specialty can’t and won’t be replaced by nurses. Really great at calling other doctors to report symptoms. You can get by without knowing much. Just shotgun every test and scan then call the relevant specialist according to the positive results
I love that the cause for burnout for EM isn't the patient experience it's the bureaucracy
Of course healthcare first enemy 😂
It is also one of the biggest reasons for burnout among Army Officers as well. I think the main reason for both is because you are told to think outside the box and be a good leader but when you want to think for yourself Admin Staff above you restrict you to unrealistic expectations, policies, and metrics. You have people who know nothing (or very little) about your scenario or job and just want to chase the paper.
@@CPT_Crandalf well said!
I had Dr Zhang at Jefferson ER this past May. Best Er doc I ever had. I felt he really cared. Very professional, intelligent, personable, and detail oriented. It was super busy and he was taking care of a large amt of patients.
I can tell Dr. Zhang is truly an incredible doctor with the way he describes what he does. Can’t get enough of these episodes!
This doc’s entire demeanor changes when he started talking about GETTING to mentor and teach! Way to respect and maturely solve observed negatives that everyone will deal with inevitably. Live a life worth living, and be grateful for the opportunities themselves, good and bad 🎉
I caught myself rewatching all the podcasts 😅😅
you can tell everytime Zach calls it the Emergency Room, Dr. Zhang cringes inside.
What’s he supposed to call it?
Technically "Emergency Department"
@@tanisj2470 Emergency Department 👍
Good afternoon Dr Zang the interviewer Zac Highley is skilled enough to question you about details of
your work ethic. It leaves me gobsmacked. The burn out work, alternative of teaching and mentoring for
you is so interesting to listen too. Finding a solution. Makes me feel safe and cared for. Thank you 😊 💓
from NZ Downunder
Thank you both for a wonderful podcast! It is so nice to hear from an ER doctor on the internet who is not burnt out.
Its so motivating right 😊
You hit on a strong point when you said “what if you never tried emergency medicine?”.
I think of this a lot. In regards to everything. What if you never tried violin? What if you never tried baseball? Mathematics at a serious level? Theoretical physics? Politics? And so on. It’s something interesting to think about that transcends careers.
I’m watching all your interview series Zach, and I want to tell you how inspiring these are, how lucky you ate having so amazing teachers.
If you have a cardiology teacher ready for your an interview would be amazing :)
Was just reading a CBC article mentioning that 1 in 2 doctors experience high levels of burnout - y'all are just amazing.
First time coming across your stuff - I'm looking forward to seeing more of your content!
Awesome episode. Looking forward to the Anesthesia/Critical Care interview.
It's coming...
A great reminder for me as a patient to take the time to always express my gratitude for quality care.
What great content to be available to anyone on the internet. So informative, and his answers so thoughtful.
A lot of really informative content here Zach, maybe create some shortform content out of the podcasts to push it to a wider audience?
Good idea, I'll definitely do this sometime in the future.
yes interview too long try
more of a focused format
1:22:03 Is he perhaps thinking of "The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down"?
I spent 3 years in an ER during undergrad and I loved it so much. Everything about it. But I love M-F work life. I love having Saturday mornings and Sunday with family. ER is a weird field, it can fit us so well, but the lifestyle can be so rough. I didn’t have to work nights in undergrad so I have no idea what it’s like to shift from nights/days and days/nights. I can imagine it being really rough. I think it’s a lot more rough than some ER docs are truthful about. And plus, we just had an ER doc at our school who I loved, had a massive MI. Idk man, it’s a tough life. We will see! Sad though because I love the field. It’s funny he mentioned Gordon. I wanted to be a cook before medicine. I’m not proud to say this, but I function better under immense stress. I prefer to be yelled at. Sounds crazy to say that 😂. It gets me locked in. Anyway, we will have to wait for 3rd year.
Wow.. Ur really Interesting 😊
Zach, another great interview and so informative! Do you think you would ever interview a nurse practitioner? I know it strays from your traditional MD/DO content, but I am graduating nursing school and am very interested in being an NP in an ICU down the road!
Possibly!
Nice talk.
Doc not gonna see his daughter graduate high school if he keeps up the 4 hrs of sleep/6 coffees a day
Zach, I really love all your interviews. Joe Rogan, who? Lex Fridman, what?😊
Haha thanks for sticking with me
love the pod!
Love you!
I hate EM. Can’t convince me that entire specialty can’t and won’t be replaced by nurses. Really great at calling other doctors to report symptoms. You can get by without knowing much. Just shotgun every test and scan then call the relevant specialist according to the positive results
Are you a medical student
❤