Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Internship Recap: Week 15-17

It's clinical time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I know I'm way too excited about this.  And I know it's probably going to wear out eventually.  But for now, let's all just rejoice in the fact that clinical rotations have started and are making me happier than a basketfull of puppies.  And I would just looooove a basketfull of puppies.

My first clinical rotation was General Internal Medicine, in which I was with a dietitian who works primarily in the stroke and neurovascular wards/clinics.  She also does some work on medical floors, so we saw some stuff outside of stroke as well.  I did this rotation with a fellow intern who had also just come out of the foodservice rotation, so it was the first clinical rotation for both of us.  Because our primary focus on this unit was stroke and neurovascular disorders, we dealt a lot with dysphagia (swallowing difficulties), enteral feeding (tube feeding when swallowing isn't working), and many, many cognitive challenges with our patients including speech difficulties and language barriers (both because of the stroke and the patients' ability to understand us/respond appropriately, as well as language barriers because the area we are in is primarily Portuguese and Italian).  It's been super interesting.  Like, ridiculously so.  Every day is different, every patient's situation and plan is unique, and every nutrition support plan you make for a patient can change on a dime.

I.

LOVE.

It.

!!!

So since I didn't blog throughout the rotation, I'll give a general overview of the last 3 weeks...

First week of clinical was "orientation week", which really means that we had a half day or so orientation to the unit and common things to watch for before being tossed into it! Within the first 3 hours of the first day, we had already participated in neurovascular medicine rounds, and had a family meeting with a patient who was to be discharged back home with support from several community health services.  The next day we were reviewing charts for medications affecting nutritional status and calculating enteral nutrition feeds for a patient who was scheduled to receive a G-tube (a feeding tube that is surgically implanted into the stomach, rather than the kind that goes up the nose and down the throat).  By Thursday we were charting our own assessment and follow up notes, and calling for consults with other disciplines.  It's all been very fast, and the first day or two was very overwhelming, but the pieces are starting to come together and make more sense.  The more we get immersed, the more we're learning and becoming better able to work independently.

The really cool thing about general medicine, and particularly stroke/neurovascular medicine, is that several disciplines are involved in just about everything the patient does.  Almost every patient (depending on their situation and how they were affected by their stroke) has a doctor, a physiotherapist, an occupational therapist, a speech language pathologist (SLP), a dietitian, a social worker, and maybe others who follow their case.  Everyone meets every morning to discuss every case in the unit to keep each other updated on patient conditions, and collaborate to determine if other disciplines should get involved to better care for the patient.  This also gives us interns a great opportunity to learn from these other disciplines, who also have their own students and are usually more than happy to have an extra couple tag along to observe their work.  We've watched a few swallowing and language assessments from SLPs including two barium video fluoroscopies (where the patient drinks/eats something with barium in it, and their swallowing is x-rayed so that the SLPs can watch the video back and see whether the person is swallowing correctly).

Over the last 3 weeks, I've seen a lot of progression and growth - both my own, and my patients.  It's been really cool to see stroke patients progress in their treatment and eventually get to go home.  In the first week we met a man who was a retired physician and had had a stroke.  He was receiving feeds through nasogastric tube (the up-the-nose down-the-throat kind) and wasn't making much sense when he talked.  His language skills had been greatly affected - speech slurred, having difficulty finding the right words to use.  When he could speak coherently, his cognitive ability seemed to be pretty impaired.  This week he was eating pureed and thickened foods (a BIG deal to graduate from feeding tube to swallowing your own food!) and was talking clearly, and able to respond to questions coherently.  He told us about his practice as a physician, and was able to participate in his care.  Amazing.  In my own growth, I've gone from having absolutely no confidence to speak to patients independently and being unsure of everything, to easily walking into patient's rooms and projecting confidence, empathy, and able to provide education to patients without my preceptor even being in the room with me.  I'm also doing my own chart notes directly in the patient records, and just needed my preceptor's sign off (because we're students and can't legally sign off our own charts or write orders).


I'm now heading into clinical rotation #2 in musculoskeletal rehab, dealing with spinal cord injuries and disorders affecting muscular or neurological function (like Parkinsons, cerebral palsy and MS).  Update to come!

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