The amount of time my team thinks about poop is honestly impressive. Just today our team had a 30 minute discussion about our patient's inability to poop.
@@solslastcannula5665 oh well then the problem is solved, if only you had been there! Why didn't we think of that sooner??? There's a lot more that goes into it.
@@SolarManOmega Yep. I had the "opportunity" to learn on my third day of the job 😂 I suppose it depends on the hospital because they may have different scopes of practice for nurses. But most poop-related stuff usually makes its way into a nurse's scope somehow...
Hilarious and accurate. I recently graduated med school and start working in the hospital, its funny seeing the med students from the other angle. Yesterday after the rounds the two med students were profusely apologising to the consultant for being late because of their tutorial. In my head i kept thinking: "he doesn't care, and he probably didn't even know you guys were coming at all today!"
When I read the title, I instantly knew what this video was going to be about xD 3rd year med, no patients the whole evening, I've been sitting in the ER for 2.5 hours waiting to see if the transfer is going to come in (which it may or may not). I ask repeatedly for other tasks but there is nothing else to do. I'm officially done call at 11pm, and it's 1030 which is way too late to start an IM consult anyway. Me- (after 2.5 hours going back and forth in my head) "Well..........if the patient isn't coming in the next little bit, I might take off soon..." Resident- "Oh, sure." Next day- (called in by my program director for a meeting about professionalism and "really seeming like I don't even want to be there" :D )
Hilarious. On a side note, on my IM rotation, some residents told me that I could leave and that it was not a test. Then they wrote on my evaluation that I leave early. Was a big reason I stayed away from that specialty, seemed hostile. XD
It is really good you raise awareness about the trauma and stress involved in training to be a doctor. Gosh. But also how that impacts upon patients...