Sunday, April 3, 2011

central arkansas

Check out the new field for UCA! I hear no new extreme fields are allowed in D1, everybody else can go crazy! also check out eastern washington if haven't seen it.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

A Brief Foray

A quick sally into a realm I do not dare attempt conquer. A lady arrived in my ED today, status post her second elective abortion, about six weeks ago. She was obviously poor and uneducated. She was having some lower abdominal cramping. She had also experienced some spotting after her bleeding had stopped from the abortion. She was concerned, but didn't want to see her OB, because she felt ashamed of what she had done with her last pregnancy. After a thourough evaluation, the only abnormality I could find was a positive HCG. Ultrasound confirmed a gestational sack, and I took her the news. Your pregnant.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Gun Debate from The Grunt Doc

Check out the Grunt Doc Blog, if you haven't already, probably the most nationally recognised blog in EM. A recent post there about the following Florida debate as posted below led me to comment, and posted at bottom is the comment I made in reply to others. Please see Grunt Doc page for full story.

The National Rifle Association and other gun rights groups had pushed for a much stronger bill that would have precluded doctors, in many cases, from asking patients about whether they own guns. Backers of the measure, sponsored by Sen. Greg Evers, R-Baker, had said patients were being harassed over gun ownership.




But citing the confidentiality of what is said between doctors and patients, and a broader desire to protect other members of patients’ families, doctors had pushed back hard against the bill (SB 432). The issue had promised a fight between two of the most powerful lobbies at the Florida Capitol.



But an amendment adopted before the committee’s vote on Monday would now generally allow doctors to ask questions about gun ownership, as long as the physician doesn’t “harass” the patient, and doesn’t enter the information into the patient’s record without a good reason. That leaves enough room that doctors now support the measure, as does the NRA.



via Doctors, Gun Groups Compromise on Gun Ownership Questions
Sunshine State News



5.doc hog Says:


April 1st, 2011 at 9:42 am

Drug, gang violence, maybe. Kids for sure. Professor Hale, I have no trigger locks either, but that is a standard safety question that can be found in many pediatric text books right there with car seats, toxic materials in home, etc. It is just to allow parents to think about safety, there is no law that says they have to have the locks, and we wouldn’t pursue it any further. Doctors are in a unique place at the crossroads between science and the humanities, and we have always been directly in the “social change lane.” See Howard Dean, Rand Paul, Ron Paul, Jean Paul Marat, Bill Frist, Che Guevera, Anton Chekov, Arthur Conan Doyle, W. Somerset Maugham, William Carlos Williams, Oliver Wendall Holmes, James Mchenry (US Constituition signer), among many, many others. We are an integral part of social change. Like I said, I own multiple guns, and they would have to pry them from my cold dead hands to get them, but we are not talking about gun control here.



Thursday, March 31, 2011

http://http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21141080 Here is the link to a new article about a plan at one seattle area Emergency Department that has greatly reduced the amount of narcotics prescribed. Pretty interesting, but really extreme. Maybe this is what we need now?

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Bitemporal Hemianopsia

Bitemporal Hemianopsia
vision missing in the lateral, temporal half ofboth visual fields. Caused by compression of the optic nerve at the optic chiasm, affecting the bilateral medial retina. Most often due to tumors of the pituitary that are forced to expand upward because of the bony "saddle" they sit in, the sella turcica, or turkey saddle. Here you see an interesting example direct from the number one most frequently used medical resource, wikipedia. This example shows two views of Paris. The second obviously with bitemporal hemianopsia. Loved these pictures, and love wiki, so had to post them. Enjoy.

Back and Bigger and Better

We are back! Yes, I couldnt stand to stay in private mode any longer, nothing to post for. Screw the gestapo! Of course, I did have to delete several posts that I had posted during the time the blog went under the radar, but no matter. The Hog Blog is coming back and with more posts, more stories, more case reports, and more bullshit than ever. And I have a special, heart warming, story to celebrate with......Recently, a young lady with crohn's has made multiple visits to our emergency department. She has a jejunostomy, and she has had various episodes of cracking and bleeding around the ostomy site. After much prodding on her fifth visit for the same complaint, she admits that she is actually a prostitute, and she is selling sex with her ostomy site! We called her the "Ostitute"!

Friday, February 25, 2011

Paul Broun

Paul Broun, The doctor turned Congressman from Athens, GA who allowed rhetoric about assasinating Obama to go unchallenged at his own rally is a disgrace to both of the professions he represents. His inaction and complacence is no better than that of Sarah Palin or the silent under Hitler. Let me say, he does not represent all doctors. Unfortunatly, he does likely represent the majority, but definetly not the majority of ED docs. or is it spelled Paul braun?

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Primum non what?

Primum non nocerem (sp?) What about first do nothing, primoris, operor nusquam? I think that was the fat man's motto, and it served those guys well enough, not doing bad for me either.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Difficult Family

A particularly difficult family member was my problem recently. a real pain in my ass. His mother, an 89 year old bed bound nursing home pt, was dying. Shitting blood and bleeding out through the gut. She looked like a picture of death when she rolled through the door, and my first move was to look for a code status, which I fully expected should have been "Do not Resuscitate." It was not. We all began to mutter under our breaths and slowly began to work on the unfortunate woman. Torture her, we said. We were just preparing to intubate when they brought her son back. He was in tears. Didn't he expect this? Despite pointed questions and multiple attempts, he was adamant that the woman should be full code. We intubated her, put in a central line, and began dumping in fluids and uncrossed blood. Her initial hemoglobin was 4.4. She coded multiple times, and we collapsed her chest wall with our compressions. I made repeated visits to the son in the family room; updating, and occasionally pleading the case to withdraw support. He had family members on the way, could we just keep her going until they arrived? He was crying constantly. We worked for three hours, diverting care from younger, healthier patients who just had to wait. Finally, the grandchildren arrived, and slowly, after much talk with the chaplain, the nurses, and myself, the man decided to withdraw support. The woman went quietly, in a darkened room, surrounded by family. When it was over the man hugged me, thanking me repeatedly. He cried some more, and this time I cried as well. I had bought him the time he needed to come to grips with his mother's death. Maybe I still resented him a little for what I felt was prolonging her misery, but at that moment I felt understanding for his point of view, and I realized that often we feel family members are "difficult" or hard to deal with, largely because they just dont agree with exactly what we think should happen, and the decision does not rest solely with us.

Friday, December 10, 2010

darkness

The trauma service amd its 100 hour weeks is even worse in the winter. You miss all the short day light hours and find yourself inside all day, in only the faded glow of the flourescent lights. depression descends quickly under these conditions, amongst the death and mayhem.