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When No One Wants To See The Patient: The ER’s On-Call Labyrinth

The call schedule is hidden somewhere inside!

The call schedule is hidden somewhere inside!

Dictation:

‘The patient was seen in the emergency department by Dr. Niemans, who is the acting hospitalist on call for Dr. Whitman’s group, who usually admit for the patient’s actual primary care provider, Emily Knight, PA, who works for  Dr. Robelo, who no longer takes call, but admits his patients to the hospitalist.

Because the patient has COPD and an acute left-lower-lobe pneumonia, pulmonology was consulted.  However, no pulmonologist is available this weekend.  Pulmonary is being covered by Dr. Albertson, pulmonologist in the neighboring city.  I spoke with Dr. Albertson about this and he told me he wasn’t taking call for our patients, and why did people keep bothering him.

The patient’s cardiologist, Dr. Rease, is being covered by Dr. James.  I spoke to Edgar, PA for Dr. James who said that as of 7am, Dr. James was trading call with Dr. Housefield while Dr. James went to his son’s soccer game, but if I had any questions I should call Dr. Housefield’s Nurse Practitioner Michael, who would be rounding for Dr. Housefield, Dr. James and Dr. Josefson, at least until soccer was over or something bad happened. Read more »

*This blog post was originally published at edwinleap.com*

Rural Emergency Medicine: Stigma & Stereotypes


Lee Falls, SC

I practice in the rural, northwest corner of South Carolina, also known as “The Upstate.”  It is a place of expansive lakes, white-water rivers and the mist covered foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The area includes thousands of acres of Sumter National Forest.  The natural beauty is breathtaking.  Sumter National Forest and our various parks are laced with hiking trails, which are lined with unique plants and trees, some found nowhere else.   Fish and game abound.  In fact, our wooded hospital grounds support a flock of at least 30 wild turkey.  And last deer season, the only deer I saw were the three does grazing at the end of the ED driveway one night, spotlighted by two of our paramedics.

We have a lot of wonderful things here, things that are gifts of the rural life.  We have good people, the salt of the earth types who care about personal morality and Southern courtesy.  People who bring you a glass of sweet tea when your car breaks down.  We live with a low crime rate, and minimal illicit drug use compared with more populated areas.  It is a good place to raise children.  It’s also a cool place to practice, where a busy summer shift can bring an acute MI, a near drowning (from inner-tubing on Class IV white water while drunk), a pit viper bite, a bull goring and many other pathologies, more or less interesting.

But, as physicians in a rural area, we pay a price.  Because we have to endure a certain stigma.   Read more »

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