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Casebook of a Community Internist

Blogs

  • 12/9/2024

    Death and dying: what do young doctors need to know?

    Dr. Hector Baillie writes how nowadays, the role of the doctor has become further removed from one-on-one compassionate care.
  • 11/7/2024

    Walking in other people’s shoes: a thought experiment

    Complexity is the reason the healthcare system is collapsing: patients are older, on more drugs, with high expectations, and not enough beds.
  • 10/29/2024

    Young and old

    I’d like to share with you the stories of two patients: the oldest and the youngest patients I have seen with a presentation of cardiac dysfunction.
  • 10/10/2024

    Border zones: Liminal space in medicine and beyond

    Overlap areas can prove to be some of the most dynamic.
  • 8/13/2024

    Data: Musings on its importance in medicine

    Four letters, two of them repeated. Not a big word. But one on which businesses are built and run by. And what is the most complicated business on the planet Earth? Medicine.
  • 8/6/2024

    Pushing pills and curing ills

    How long have physicians been pushing remedies for asymptomatic disease?
  • 7/22/2024

    Context: an integral tool for educating patients

    ‘Well Bill, your master spark plug is getting rusty,’ I said to a 72-year-old retired mechanical engineer.
  • 6/19/2024

    The retirement glidepath

    Having had the privilege to re-write so many patients epilogues through his care, Dr. Hector Baillie reflects on the complicated task of creating his own.
  • 6/5/2024

    The value of observation

    You don't need to be Sherlock Holmes to practice the powerful art of observation—after all, his literary inventor was a physician.
  • 5/27/2024

    Gout

    I got a bad strep throat, and antibiotics did the trick. Two weeks later, I awoke with a painful, erythematous, tender and swollen right forefoot. 
  • 5/26/2024

    Reflections from the ER: Aleysha’s story

    One critical event debriefing in 35 years says a lot about the way we treat ourselves. We can do better.
  • 4/10/2024

    Code Blue

    I was sitting in the cafeteria, taking a break from hospital work. My mind was somewhere else, maybe my patient list, or a book, or thinking about dinner. In an instant, I knew exactly where I was, and how fast time passed as I ran down the corridor.
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