Medical School Snowflakes
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In a clinical setting, itās fair to expect that some patient under circumstances can actually utter the phrase āI canāt breatheā, so in that sense I figure itās fair to use that phrase in a medical school exam question. I guess a rephrasing like āpatient communicates that he/she is experiencing severe difficulty in breathingā may convey the same meaning, more words, but minus the emotional trigger. Wonder if, years from now, some future doctors may get triggered when hearing the āI canāt breatheā phrase in an actual clinical setting.
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In the old days, we used to have SOAP charting:
Subjective: What the patient says.
Objective: What you see.
Assessment: What you think is going on.
Plan: What you're going to do about it.S: "I can't breathe."
O: Patient is tachypneic and cyanotic
A: Respiratory distress.
P: Blood gas analysis, chest x-ray, oxygen therapy.And if you can't handle a patient saying that, you're in the wrong profession.
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@George-K said in Medical School Snowflakes:
In the old days, we used to have SOAP charting:
Subjective: What the patient says.
Objective: What you see.
Assessment: What you think is going on.
Plan: What you're going to do about it.S: "I can't breathe."
O: Patient is tachypneic and cyanotic
A: Respiratory distress.
P: Blood gas analysis, chest x-ray, oxygen therapy.And if you can't handle a patient saying that, you're in the wrong profession.
I find that too many of the new guys are in the wrong profession. They want medicine to be a 9-5 job, weekends and holidays off with no calls. And they want to make a ton of money doing it.
I think we need a major overhaul in our medical education, from cost, to degree inflation in nursing and ancillaries, to scope of practice.
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@George-K And if you can't handle a patient saying that, you're in the wrong profession.
Eh, it's newsish. Probably bigly less than a teensy drop in the bucket.
So y'all can relax. Unless you don't mind being mistaken for a Dem, whose belief system, we learned just this morning, is based much more on "feelings".
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The only way this trigger/snowflake movement ever stops is when it becomes uncool and no longer tolerated...by the media, by celebrities, by our government, by institutions. Unfortunately it's hard to see this happening given the constant fear of legal threats and public shaming on social media.
Again, I haven't and won't vote for Trump, but it makes me appreciate how he doesn't just roll over to this idiocy.
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I have started trying to interject "This conversation is making me uncomfortable" at least once during every meeting I attend. The moment that people take me seriously is the moment I'll need to find another job.
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@Axtremus said in Medical School Snowflakes:
In a clinical setting, itās fair to expect that some patient under circumstances can actually utter the phrase āI canāt breatheā, so in that sense I figure itās fair to use that phrase in a medical school exam question. I guess a rephrasing like āpatient communicates that he/she is experiencing severe difficulty in breathingā may convey the same meaning, more words, but minus the emotional trigger. Wonder if, years from now, some future doctors may get triggered when hearing the āI canāt breatheā phrase in an actual clinical setting.
Here's a good example of the difference between a Lefty and a Righty.
The Lefty attempts to accommodate the stupidity.
The Righty tells them to grow the fuck up.