Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Journal 5

Journal 5 – June 27, 2006

This has been a pretty sad weekend here in Cathlamet. One of the volunteer EMTs drowned trying to pull someone’s jet-ski up from the bottom of the river. He was diving alone and just didn’t come back up. They still haven’t found his body. This kind of thing hits a community this small pretty hard. Not too many people were talking about it but the mood in the clinic has been noticeably gloomier the last two days. Just two months ago another EMT was crushed between two vehicles and passed away. I met his parents in the clinic this morning and was able to talk with them about it briefly, although I really didn’t know what to say. Nothing here has made me feel more like an outsider than listening to this couple talking about a tragedy that’s affected everyone else so deeply.

Otherwise, things have been pretty much par for the course. The 18 yo with the heart problem is now in OSHU but his bed in the ICU has been taken by another one of our patients that has severe aortic valve stenosis. Dr. Wright was quizzing me on his EKG interpretation and I had to admit I’d only gotten 1/3 of the way through the EKG book he gave me to read. Although I did manage to salvage some dignity by catching an unusual T wave. Why can’t they pimp me on something I DO know? Ask me anything about intravesicular bacteria. Well, maybe not anything. Micro was such a long time ago.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Tourist for a Day


I thought I deserved a day at the coast so I cruised out to Long Beach and Cape Disappointment. I can't believe I'm getting paid to be here.













North Head Lighthouse




















Dead Man's Cove

Friday, June 23, 2006

Cathlamet Internet

Cathlamet's best internet access, the marina parking lot. You just have to be sure to get a shady spot.

Journal 4

Journal 4 – June 23, 2006

The last couple of days have been pretty mellow. Yesterday was a long one but there was nothing overly stressful. The afternoon turned out to be a mostly mental health afternoon. A lot of the local residents seem to turn to Dr. Wright for counseling even though mental health services are available. I like the fact that he doesn’t just dish out meds without really talking with the patient.

So I asked Dr. Wright about abortion yesterday on the way back from Longview. He, as well as the other practitioners in the clinic, is firmly against abortion. Women who want an abortion have to drive 1 ½ hours to Portland to get one. There’s a Planned Parenthood in Longview but they don’t offer the procedures. Although I respect the doctor’s right to not perform abortions it still troubles me that women have to go so far out of their way to get a legal procedure. I’m sure there are places where it’s even more difficult.

I was strolling through town today doing some street research for my III and people recognized me and said hi. That’s such a weird feeling. I can see why people like living in a place where everyone knows each other but, on the other hand, there’s a lot to be said for anonymity.

Cathlamet town pics






Thursday, June 22, 2006

Journal 3

Journal 3 – June 21, 2006

Things have been hopping at the clinic. I can’t count the number of ambulances we’ve seen come through in the past 2 ½ days. Well, that’s not true, there’s only one ambulance, it just came a lot. The patients are brought to the clinic first for evaluation/stabilization before being taken to the hospital in Longview. Most were things like chest pain or stomach pain but one yesterday was a mystery.

An 18 yo was brought in because of severe orthostatic hypotension. His BP was almost undetectable when he sat up. He had been outdoors camping over the weekend and we assumed he was just dehydrated. So we started two IVs and pumped fluids into him but, after two bags, he was still hypotensive. As a matter of fact, he was cyanotic when he sat up. His ECG and labs were pretty normal so we sent him on to the hospital for an echo and heard nothing more about it before I left for the evening.

This morning during rounds we checked the computer before seeing him and got some pretty distressing news. He had an ejection fraction of <10% style=""> The cardiologist said he had never seen a case this bad in someone this young.

So giving him so much fluid (5 liters by the time he got to the hospital) was exactly the wrong thing to do. They spent all night in ICU diuresing him. The ARNP who saw him at the clinic was pretty distressed that she did the wrong thing but I don’t think she did.

So we started the day having to explain the problem to the kid and his mom. I can’t believe how tactfully the doctor presented such a dire case. Anybody know where I can buy some of this kind of tact?

Journal 2

Journal 2 – June 17, 2006

Part of my job here is to go with the doctors to do hospital rounds in Longview (about ½ hour away) each morning. The three practitioners rotate but I get to go every day, which makes for some pretty long days, although they recently rearranged their schedules so they don’t leave until about 6:30. Since St. John’s Hospital doesn’t use hospitalists the clinic docs direct their patients’ care throughout their hospitalization. I think I prefer this over the hospitalist system although I’m sure I haven’t had enough experience to be able to judge either. One drawback is that the doctors have to make the hour-long round-trip at least once a day and may have to change the clinic schedule at the last minute.

This week our schedule got a bit wacky due to a delivery on Thursday. We went to the hospital to admit the young woman on Wednesday night and stayed in the on-call rooms expecting to deliver early in the morning. But by nine she was only at 4cm so we headed back to Cathlamet to see a few patients. The call to get back to the hospital came about two hours later. I’d never seen a delivery before so it was a pretty amazing experience. I didn’t really do much except help stitch her up afterward but it was still memorable and I got to see my first Babinski sign. After finishing up there we headed back to the office and performed a vasectomy (not on the father). Quite a contrast in procedures for one day.

Interestingly, on the same day as the delivery the county made the final decision to stop doing Ob. at the end of this year. Last year they payed $60,000 in Ob. malpractice for the two physicians and only brought in $20,000 of reimbursement. Now women in Wahkiakum County will have to go elsewhere for care if they want to have children. It’s a shame but I guess it’s a sign of the times.

III Journal 1

Journal 1 – June 13, 2006

I came here with a sort of romantic idea about the rural clinic being continuity of care heaven. So far it’s been even better. During my first two days we saw maybe two patients the doctor didn’t know personally. Some had been coming to the same clinic for decades. So Dr. Goldstein wasn’t making all this up.

Dr. Wright and I had lunch at a local cafĂ© and he noticed that everyone there was a patient of the clinic. He seemed to know everyone we met by name. As I was mulling this over this evening I realized that, although this makes for more effective care in the clinic, it also puts a lot more pressure on the doctor to perform well and to be professional even when “off the clock”. A doctor in Seattle could walk around their neighborhood for hours and not run into a single person they recognized. Even so, I still think I’d choose the intimacy I see here over anonymity. I could always drive to another town if I wanted to stir up trouble.