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Point of Care: Where Life Meets Medicine

Blogs

  • 11/30/2010

    All I want for Christmas is fresh milk

    I often joke that in rural/remote medicine we have a “golden day” in trauma rather than a “golden hour.” Here on Christmas Island, with recent bad weather and volcanic ash blowing in from Krakatau in Indonesia, it seems to have become the golden 72 hours.
  • 11/18/2010

    My current locum redefines 'isolated'

  • 10/20/2010

    Life is what happens while you’re working

  • 10/15/2010

    Why the vegetarian embraced the hunter

  • 10/1/2010

    From clueless to competent

  • 9/17/2010

    Running on empty

    After six days of work (featuring two busy 24-hour ER shifts), I was thrilled to finally have a day off. Resolving to lie low, I settled in for a marathon of Criminal Minds on A&E. That’s when the phone rang with the voice at the other end asking me to come to the OR to assist in a C-section.
  • 9/14/2010

    Up in the air: the perks of locum work

    My quest to gain Elite status with Air Canada last year was epic. Could it be done? Could I become Elite (35,000 status points) flying only short-haul flights within Ontario, with only one transatlantic flight thrown in?
  • 9/1/2010

    Reaching out to the community, one fish at a time

    Today we lost six patients. They were dead on arrival. I was told there is nothing to be done once they are floating upside down and have no gill function. I’m not talking about humans, but a few of the unfortunate participants in the local fishing derby!
  • 8/24/2010

    An oasis in the locum desert

    Today was my 11th straight day of work in a string of calendar days blurred by four nights of call. I was tired. I felt used up. After working hard on several difficult cases without much thanks (and indeed one complaint), I felt as though no one cared about me as a person.
  • 8/9/2010

    See one, do one, teach one—if possible

    See one, do one, teach one. It’s a mantra in medicine—the manner by which skills are passed down from generation to generation. Generally, it works well. The staff teach the residents, the residents teach the med students, and the circle of learning continues. It all, however, becomes a bit uncomfortable when the three steps happen in an instant.
  • 7/28/2010

    Is this how a 'real' doctor feels?

    This isn't how I wanted to start my blog but . . . . Despite my vows not to do so, I once again find myself working way too much. The grand total of hours worked this week will just squeak in under 100! While that’s an improvement from my record 120 hours, it’s not all that much better. I wonder if I would be a little more of a pleasant person if I did less call?
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