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Why I’m thankful for my son’s surgery team

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Physician
September 6, 2012

My son had been having episodes of belly pain right around his belly button for several weeks. I watched and waited. Between these bouts of mild abdominal pain he was completely fine – healthy appetite, active, happy. But I had a feeling something was brewing. I was waiting for the other shoe to drop. The disease finally declared itself: several nights ago his belly pain was severe and unremitting. He …

Read more…

Why I’m thankful for my son’s surgery team

Why an anesthesiologist would be needed for organ donation

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Physician
February 13, 2012

I’ve only had to declare death a couple of times. Once in a three-year-old and once in an adult. In each case the heart had stopped beating. Death was clear.

Brain death is tougher to cope with, both clinically and psychologically. I imagine it would make anyone want to say, at some point, “Are you sure? Are you really sure? How do you know? How can you be sure?” Some times …

Read more…

Why an anesthesiologist would be needed for organ donation

Don’t always blame anesthesia for problems in the OR

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Physician
September 5, 2011

People blame anesthesia personnel for everything. You name it, they blame us for it. They call us by the umbrella name “Anesthesia” and if there’s a problem, it’s always “Anesthesia’s” fault.

Got into the room late? Blame Anesthesia. (Even though the anesthetist’s been sitting at the bedside for twenty minutes waiting for the surgeon or the nurses to be ready.)

Patient craving ice cream when she woke up? Must be Anesthesia’s fault.

No …

Read more…

Don’t always blame anesthesia for problems in the OR

Doctors don’t take snow days

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Physician
June 12, 2011

Editor’s note: This post was originally written this past winter.

Boston had another blizzard today. I was really worried about this one. It was supposed to snow hard, about three inches an hour from 3 a.m. to 12 p.m. with poor visibility, impassable roads, etc. I’ve driven home in snow like that, and I find it terrifying. Your car won’t do what you want it to, and worse, other people can’t …

Read more…

Doctors don’t take snow days

Calling in sick serves as a reminder for compassion for this doctor

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Physician
March 28, 2011

One of my Facebook updates on my private account was that I “have a love-hate relationship with interleukin-6. Yes, macrophages and T cells, I know you are doing your job, but how many proinflammatory cytokines does it really take to fight this thing? What’s that? Be grateful you guys are even working? Oh, all right. I’ll shut up and eat my soup now.”

Yes, I’ve been sick this week. It started …

Read more…

Calling in sick serves as a reminder for compassion for this doctor

Can a doctor and a nurse be friends in the OR?

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Physician
January 23, 2011

One of my best friends in med school was an O.B. nurse. Though she has moved almost all the way across the country and I haven’t seen her since I was in school, we’re still in touch and expect to be seeing each other at last in a couple of months.

By some coincidence one of my best friends now is also an O.B. nurse. I’ll call her Ziva (yes, I …

Read more…

Can a doctor and a nurse be friends in the OR?

Never forget to advocate for your patient

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Patient
November 24, 2010

There are some lessons we learn and keep re-learning in medicine. For me some of these recurring lessons are,

  • Listen to your “gut.”
  • Pay attention to the clues.
  • Listen to your team.
  • Don’t be afraid to call for help.

and

  • Stick to your guns when advocating for your patient.

I encountered a young patient recently, just at the cusp of adolescence and adulthood, who had undergone a procedure related to a sports injury. Other people had been …

Read more…

Never forget to advocate for your patient

Should humanities be the focus of prospective medical students?

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Education
October 6, 2010

There’s been considerable buzz on the web recently – on the New York Times website, on Facebook, and on a physicians’ forum called Sermo, at least – over a New York Times article recently entitled, “Getting Into Med School Without Hard Sciences.”

The article describes the Humanities and Medicine Program at Mount Sinai Medical School, a program which each year admits into the medical school 35 undergraduates who major …

Read more…

Should humanities be the focus of prospective medical students?

Health care reform controversy in both Europe and the United States

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Policy
August 31, 2010

On my way onto the plane for my recent flight home from France I picked up a copy of Le Figaro thinking I might enjoy the article about actress Sophie Marceau, who was on the cover of everything while we were in France in celebration of her turning 40.

I did enjoy catching up on Marceau – I still remembering watching La Boum in my high school French class – but …

Read more…

Health care reform controversy in both Europe and the United States

Treating people with humility, and every patient like a V.I.P.

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Patient
August 8, 2010

People often seem to think that members of the medical world are excessively preoccupied with, defined according to, and ruled by a status-oriented system.

That may have been an accurate perception a generation ago, but I’ve seen enough surgeons sweeping O.R. floors, attending physicians socializing with interns, and doctors having deep conversations with custodians to believe that “medical people” have matured a little past the old caste systems that governed the …

Read more…

Treating people with humility, and every patient like a V.I.P.

The grief men face when their wives undergo mastectomies

Anesthesioboist T., MD
Conditions
July 8, 2010

I have given anesthesia for a lot of breast surgery. I don’t think I’ll ever get used to the fog of pain and sorrow surrounding a double mastectomy.

All surgery is invasive in some way. Amputations, in particular, have a horror all their own; the idea that destroying someone – cutting off a body part, violating a coherent whole – should be necessary in order to save a life is almost …

Read more…

The grief men face when their wives undergo mastectomies

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  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

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    • The controversy over Maintenance of Certification for grandfathered physicians

      Bernard Leo Remakus, MD | Physician
    • When side effects are actually a cry for help with medication costs

      Shuchita Gupta, MD | Physician
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      Timothy Lesaca, MD | Physician
    • The Schism of Time: Bridging the generational gap in the workplace

      Seleipiri Akobo, MD, MPH, MBA | Physician
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