June 16, 2009

Attention Span

I find myself comforted by the fact that I get bored during long surgeries.  When they're interesting, surgeries definitely are fun to watch or to help with.  I like sewing people back up and feeling the immediate gratification, so I can only imagine the satisfaction that must come with opening up someone's heart and making it better.  But it's not worth spending a lifetime of not being able to take a break!  A few years back, one of our UCI surgeons had a heart attack during a super long surgery.  There was no one else who could take over, so he just had himself hooked up to a nitro IV and finished the surgery because he couldn't walk away and leave the patient flayed open on the table.  Now that's just craziness.  Admirable, certainly, but crazy nonetheless.

I find my boredom comforting because for a little while I thought surgery might sway me away from emergency medicine.  Switching to surgery as my specialty choice, however, would throw my life into a vortex, because every extracurricular activity I've done so far, my whole medical career foundation, revolves around emergency medicine.  Many ER doctors I know confessed to their utter boredom during their med school surgery rotations.  One, very near and dear to me and who shall remain unnamed - a certain Dr. P - fell asleep while he was holding a patient's chest open with the retractor!  So by being bored in surgeries sometimes, I know I'm on the right track.

June 15, 2009

Moments of Clarity

As I was getting bored during a surgery the other day, I realized that no matter how long the surgery drags on, surgeons can't just wander off to grab a bite to eat or get on the internet like I do to recharge before going back to studying.  And THAT, my friends, seems like a drag.

Another thing I realized today:  regret is a terrible thing to have.  They say, you usually regret the things you don't do more than the things that you do.  I think that's quite true.

June 1, 2009

First (Academic) Publication

Yay!!!!!!!!!!!

Sent:Monday, June 01, 2009 6:04 PM
To:
Cc:
Dear Pamela Yamamoto Swan; Beverly Nighswonger RN; Gregory L. Boswell RN; and Samuel J. Stratton MD, MPH,

After careful review, your article "Factors Associated With False-Positive Emergency Medical Services Triage for Percutaneous Coronary Intervention" has been accepted by the editors of the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine.  You will receive a page proof prior to publication.

Thank you for your submission and we look forward to receiving your future scholarly work.

Sincerely,

Mark Langdorf MD, MHPE
Editor
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine