Wonderful. Enjoy you two π
Oh dear π«
This has to be satire π«©
All I have to say is I hope governments worldwide are preparing for the increased comorbidities that are appearing in the 30 to 40 age group as compared to previously. You cannot 'magically' create more doctors to manage those increasing numbers π«€
I can't wait to hibernate tomorrow and watch the new season π
They erased us from the textbooks. Iβm putting us back in the story.
They buried our truth and hoped weβd stay silent.
ERASED isnβt a bookβitβs a weapon.
Read it before they ban it. Share it before they silence it.
Get your copy now.
stan.store/gxldsociety/...
Maybe one day I will be able to, but not anytime soon π
I have been an ER doc for more than 10 years. Honestly at this point in my life.....I don't think I can stomach one episode of the Pitt. So during the holidays when my family gathered to celebrate, and they all talked about their favorite episodes, I had nothing to contribute π₯²π«©
Awesome stuff π
Gorgeour....give him all the treats π
Besides his whiplash injury, he also ended up with a pneumothorax.
I the ER, sometimes, it is the little things....like a piece of clothing....and your gut instinct....lol.
Honestly I stay as far from motorcycles π as possible. The persons who make it in alive and are patients I have treated...have taught me to stay far from them. I also did not know about motorcycle boots. Now I do. If I hadn't asked about the boots, I wont have realized the severity of the accident
Immediate trauma room transfer for assessment and management.The real story....the patient was on a motorcycle when the accident occurred and his friends decided to move him, from the ground to the hospital instead of waiting for an ambulance. They were all drinking and doing weed during the party
Then the RN says to them, to take off his footwear since they want to put him on a trolley. So I say.....'Those boots look extremely confortable'......They then reply.....yeah really important to use when riding a motorcycle. I look over to the triage RN, and my mouth drops open.
I ask them where exactly did they get him from....They reply the same thing...the police told them not to wait on an ambulance, but to bring him to the hospital. Honestly I wasn't at the accident scene...so I have no idea if anyone actually told them anything.
I reply....the police said you could move him to bring him in. They say....yes. I ask them twice and they said the same thing....lol. I look at the vitals.....Spo2 97%, not tachycardic...BP ok. I watch the sweat on his bald head.
The triage RN tells me he was in an MVA after a party and his friends brought him in. I thought MVA = car/SUV....but something was bothering me about the story. So I ask his friends what happened. They report they brought him in from the MVA because the police on the scene said they could.
1) He was bald headed π¨β𦲠and sweating π on his head, even though he was talking and even joking with his friends and the triage RN.Vitals stable
2) His interesting π€ extremely padded boots that reached to his mid calf.
I decided to listen in on his story with the triage RN.
It is like 3 or 4am.
Patient was sitting up in the wheelchair, grinning and saying everything was fine π. His vitals were stable atm. The triage RN was speaking to him and his companions. I just happened to be passing by. I noticed two things.
In the ER, sometimes a piece of clothing will key you in on severity of trauma. A guy came in the other day wearing interesting looking boots. He was accompanied by two persons...who were not present with him, at the time the accident occurred. 1/n
For everyone traveling, a reminder to masks up and avoid spending your holidays sick.
π·βοΈπ¦
It is raining π§ outside. Go to sleep π΄ comfortably. π
Lobster π¦ mac n cheese.....OMG π€€
I actually love EM. But ready to try a slower paced job. π€
Sounds like a fellowship involved. π€
I am giving it much thought.
Can I actually leave the excitement and thrill of EM to sitting in the dark looking at images all day long. π«
So you became a field epidemiologist? That is awesome.π. Thanks for the support.
What if, after ten years of practicing Emergency Medicine, I decided that I want to do Radiology π«£π€.