I was on call in the ICU on my first day of internship. That terrified me. What do I even bring? I didn't know. But I showed up, learned about my patient (we started with just one, so that was reassuring) and rounded with the team, scribbling frantically on my list those things that I thought were important. That's the thing about being an intern. We're responsible for all the details, all the small things, and so I jot down any vague information that might help me overnight: their creatinine or their mental status or their wife's name. I figured that having more information is better than not, which overwhelmed me completely.
After a lecture, we started getting admissions. Luckily, I got the straightforward admissions - two thoracic surgery cases. But after afternoon rounds, I realized being on call is not easy. Suddenly, I inherited ten more patients to worry about. As my co-interns went home, they signed out their patients to me. I learned that interns never have spare time. I would sit down to work on a note, and a nurse would ask me to see a patient or the pharmacy would call about a drug or the lab would alert me to critical results. And though my instinct was to say, "I'm a medical student, let me ask the intern," now I was the intern. Most things I figured out myself, and I always had backup from my resident and fellow.
But then for a two hour span, the resident and fellow were called down to the emergency department to evaluate a potential admission. I scurried about checking on all the patients in the unit, making clinical decisions - albeit small - and recording these faithfully so I could report them. From time to time, I'd page my senior, but for the most part, I was practicing medicine. True, most of it was cookbook - repletion of potassium, administration of lasix, prescription of pain medication - but it was a really new experience. If I wanted something, it would be done. Furthermore, when patients developed new symptoms, I would go to the bedside and evaluate. I would determine whether I needed further workup or whether I could start empiric treatment. Or I would find that I was in over my head and grab my resident. But these decisions were mine to make and that was an immensely liberating and gratifying feeling.
wow, Craig! Boldly going forth and being a doctor!! The ICU intern experience sounds crazy, but I'm wishing you well. :) Thanks for sharing as always~
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