Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
- bobtheenchantedone
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
I just discovered that there are few things more relieving than realizing you don't actually have to keep arguing with misguided people on Facebook.
The Epistler was quite honestly knocked on her ethereal behind by the sheer logic of this.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
I only made it through about half an hour of Relief Society before breaking down. Sigh.
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UffishThought
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Eh, some days I can't make it through Relief Society, either. Don't feel too bad.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
okay, so this is what I don't understand, not with med students but nurses/doctors. Why do I have to say what's wrong with me like five times? If I'm sick, of course I'm not going to say the same thing twice, it's not like I've rehearsed it. I hate it when the doctor comes in and asks all the same questions as the nurse. It just makes me want to ask "can you read??"NerdGirl wrote:If you ever go the ER, don't tell the med student completely different things than what you tell the doctor. It just makes us look like complete morons and it doesn't actually help you.
But maybe there's a magical thing to asking people twice?
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NerdGirl
- President of the Lutheran Sisterhood Gun Club
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Honestly, yes, there is something magical about having people tell their story. Not always about telling something more than once, although people frequently do remember details that they didn't remember the first time. But you cannot understand a patient's symptoms and what is going on with them completely just by reading the chart, no matter how detailed the chart is. It used to frustrate me, too, before I was in med school (I've been a patient a LOT). But medicine is about someone's life and their narrative and their experience, not just a list of symptoms, and you need to hear them tell the story if you are going to be responsible for their care. There is a lot you can tell by how someone tells the story, and when you hear it all in context, it's much easier to ask clarifying questions and to go into more detail about certain things. And the triage nurse, the regular nurse, and the doctor all have different roles in patient care and need information for different reasons, so they are going to ask things in different ways and focus on different parts of the story.Whistler wrote:okay, so this is what I don't understand, not with med students but nurses/doctors. Why do I have to say what's wrong with me like five times? If I'm sick, of course I'm not going to say the same thing twice, it's not like I've rehearsed it. I hate it when the doctor comes in and asks all the same questions as the nurse. It just makes me want to ask "can you read??"NerdGirl wrote:If you ever go the ER, don't tell the med student completely different things than what you tell the doctor. It just makes us look like complete morons and it doesn't actually help you.
But maybe there's a magical thing to asking people twice?
There are some practical reasons for it as well. You need to make sure that you have the story correct (not because nurses get things wrong, but sometimes they are tired or busy or you read their notes wrong or they don't ask the exact same questions you need to ask because they need different information than what you need - it happens). And in the ERs that I've worked in, sometimes when you go to see the patient, the nursing notes aren't actually in the chart yet because the nurse is still writing them or the nurse is doing something with them and all you have is the little one-sentence thing in the computer from the triage nurse, and you don't want to make the patient wait longer so you just go in and see them without having read the nursing notes. And there are some questions that you have to ask repeatedly even if the patient has answered them a million times because it's going to be a disaster if you get certain details wrong - ie, "I'm going to write you a prescription for X. I know you've been asked this about 10 times, but do you have any drug allergies? I just want to be absolutely sure so I don't give you something you're allergic to."
So yeah, there are a variety of reasons for it, but actually hearing the story from the patient in their own words whenever possible is incredibly important.
(And my initial comment was referring to huge discrepancies in what some patients tell different people - like they'll tell me that they are on some medication for something, then tell the doctor that they aren't taking any medication for anything, or vice versa. And it's kind of important to know what meds someone is on before you give them more meds - we can look up pharmacy records, but those only have prescription meds on them. And I don't even mean elderly patients who are on so many things they don't remember them all - people my age are the ones that tend to do this.)
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
well, thanks for explaining that, I've always wondered
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Thank you for your comma splice, I appreciate it.
XD
XD
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
That feels semicolonish to meGiovanni Schwartz wrote:Thank you for your comma splice, I appreciate it.
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
A comma splice is where you put a comma where a semicolon belongs.
To use more worldly terms, it's like the words in your sentence saved the spot in bed reserved for semi-colon and gave it to comma.
To use more worldly terms, it's like the words in your sentence saved the spot in bed reserved for semi-colon and gave it to comma.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Gio, you gave a textbook example of a comma splice.
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
In my response to Whistler? That was the whole point.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Who made you the syntax police? 
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Oops... I dropped my hashtag.
I was #trolling.
I was #trolling.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
*eyeroll
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
;D Love ya, Whistler. You know, my first Question ever was specifically addressed to you.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Meandering through my local library, I picked two new things to learn: Javascript and Swedish (already thought of Weird Al). We'll see how long either sticks.
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
great now I feel guilty for my punctuation transgressions AND being apathetic about it
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/110 ... e-dare-you
Awesome. And relevant to our talk here of secessionists. I love TNR.
Awesome. And relevant to our talk here of secessionists. I love TNR.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
I'm not sure why everyone is afraid of Texas secceding. I'm ignorant: why is it such a big deal? If that's what most of the people in Texas want why not let them go?
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Because then we'd have to redesign the flag! Duh! We can't let that happen!
Although I saw a funny... blog post? where they were like "2164 residents of South Dakota have signed the petition. They just need a few more head of cattle, then they'll have 100% of the people there."
Although I saw a funny... blog post? where they were like "2164 residents of South Dakota have signed the petition. They just need a few more head of cattle, then they'll have 100% of the people there."