Sunday, June 15, 2008
Blah.
uo apparently I managed to catch the sore throat bug that was going around the class at our graduation events last weekend. I thought I had escaped. Then on Thursday evening I started noticing some really funky, tender submandibular and anterior cervical adenopathy on my left side. By Friday evening my throat hurt pretty badly on the left when I swallowed, but I felt fine otherwise. I hung out with some friends in the afternoon, went to another friend's dance performance and a dinner that night. But yesterday I started to feel like I had been hit by a truck--body aches, fatigue, headache, and the sore throat. I moped around most of the day.
Of course, when it rains it pours; in the midst of my feeling like crap, we started to smell natural gas pretty strongly. So it meant a visit from the power company to determine we did not have a gas leak from the pipe, but likely a malfunctioning switch on the really tacky gas fireplace that is in our new living room. Since we will likely not use it much, we had them just shut the gas off to the fireplace. Problem solved. The dude was very thorough about checking everything and told us we definitely did the right thing to call and get it looked at now before it created an even worse situation.
Today I feel a bit better but still definitely not 100%. Thankfully, I am not starting residency tomorrow like a number of my friends are, so I will have time to kick this thing. Ironically, I was just reading an article in some journal about the attitude among many physicians that we just need to keep working through illness and are wimps if we call in sick. I definitely saw that mentality at work on the wards and it can be pretty destructive. You are not your best when you are sick and can make mistakes and provide substandard care. Plus by coming in you expose your patients and colleagues to whatever you have. Not a good situation. I can only hope that eventually rational thinking will prevail on this issue in general.
Of course, when it rains it pours; in the midst of my feeling like crap, we started to smell natural gas pretty strongly. So it meant a visit from the power company to determine we did not have a gas leak from the pipe, but likely a malfunctioning switch on the really tacky gas fireplace that is in our new living room. Since we will likely not use it much, we had them just shut the gas off to the fireplace. Problem solved. The dude was very thorough about checking everything and told us we definitely did the right thing to call and get it looked at now before it created an even worse situation.
Today I feel a bit better but still definitely not 100%. Thankfully, I am not starting residency tomorrow like a number of my friends are, so I will have time to kick this thing. Ironically, I was just reading an article in some journal about the attitude among many physicians that we just need to keep working through illness and are wimps if we call in sick. I definitely saw that mentality at work on the wards and it can be pretty destructive. You are not your best when you are sick and can make mistakes and provide substandard care. Plus by coming in you expose your patients and colleagues to whatever you have. Not a good situation. I can only hope that eventually rational thinking will prevail on this issue in general.
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5 comments:
Agreed. There are more instances of the "suck it up" attitude in medicine versus seeing safe, excellent patient care as the overriding guiding principle than I expected. I think the process is so predicated upon attrition and creating achievement strata that acknowledging any weakness is a mortal sin. Of course there is the other more sinister side of the coin to giving your patients a sore throat... you are assuring a repeat customer, kind of like how there is a fast food restaurant right in our hospital... (please not my tongue in cheek tone, I am not the devil nor do I actually believe people plan this, or do I ;))
Hope you start feeling better!
I was talking to a resident from an "intense" program and she made the comment that as a resident if you actually use your sick days it's frowned upon because that just means someone else had to work extra to cover for you. Makes sense but it still sucks.
Feel better, good call on not being exploded/carbon monoxided by a tacky fireplace. Shame you had to shut off the gas, though. Combined with some cheesy thrift store holiday sweaters and enormous hair dos, you could have made some rockin' 80's-retro holiday cards.
Very true. I was feeling iffy about whether I wanted to even assist in surgery this am, given I have had 8 hours sleep in 72. Then I was allowed to have some of the anasthetists rocket fuel coffee which tided me over for the morning list. If I were actually doing it though...
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