* * Anonymous Doc

Monday, June 28, 2010

To: My brand-new team of interns
From: Your Resident
Re: On July 1, your new life begins

Welcome! I saw that you'll be on my team starting this Thursday, and thought I would send you a quick e-mail to say hello and give you some preliminary information about what you'll be doing.

When I was in your shoes a year ago, I didn't know what to expect, there was no one to ask, and my resident didn't even bother to learn my name until two weeks in, so I thought this would be a better way to start.

Just some basic logistics:

-- We round at 8. It is your responsibility to pre-round on your patients before then. That mostly means making sure they're still alive. If you take an attending into a patient's room, and the patient is dead, the attending will be annoyed that you wasted his time, and will probably give you a poor evaluation.

-- I can't leave until all of your notes are written. That means the slower you are, the more I want to kill you because you're keeping me in the hospital. Competent interns aren't only helping themselves, they're helping me get a good night's sleep. Please be competent.

-- The hospital serves lunch on Tuesdays and Thursdays. You won't want it. Plan accordingly.

-- If you forget your computer password, you're screwed, and the woman who can help you is never at her desk. Ever. I don't think she even exists. Without your password, you can't enter orders. Don't forget your password.

-- Mr. Edwards likes chocolate milk. Mr. Edwards was here a year ago when I started, and he's still here now. He will be here forever. Get him an extra chocolate milk.

-- Put your name on your stethoscope.

-- Looking bored and sad isn't going to get me to tell you that it's okay to leave early. I tried that. A lot. It never works. You're stuck here, for a lot of hours.

-- Finally, please show up on Thursday having read something in the past three days that you can talk intelligently about, and that isn't related to medicine or the patients. We spend a lot of time together, and I can't talk about sputum for 80 hours a week. There needs to be other conversation. We can talk about your personal life, or lack thereof-- I'm sure I will talk about mine-- but sometimes it's just nice to talk about some war going on somewhere, or the state of the economy, or who won the Cardinals game. Be prepared.

-- And, one more time, because it bears repeating: if you're presenting a patient, before you start, please be sure he is not dead. It's really embarrassing.

Get some sleep, and see you soon!

3 comments:

  1. Congrats on surviving your first year!

    KrisW

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  2. How hard is it to get into your program? If its hard then you dont need to worry if your residents are competent or not!

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  3. Well written. If I were entering in to a medical internship, I'd want you, or someone like you, to be my boss.

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