Category Archives: The Barbarous Craft


Losing it

When I got into the office this morning, I heard voices. No, only one voice: faint and tinny, a disk jockey, perhaps, or a TV news anchor. I scoped out the room. Radio was off, so was the computer. WTF?

You write it . . .

. . . the power of . . .

Inspirational messages? I checked our answering machine, but the voice emanated from the office Karen and I share, not the reception desk.

Gooseflesh came when I thought of John Carpenter’s Prince of Darkness. As Lucifer’s son awakens from his long slumber, everyone begins having the same dream — a broadcast  from the future, the receiver poorly tuned, image out of focus, sound quality poor.

The voice came from my refrigerator.

Lately I’ve felt like I was at the business end of a yo-yo string, but hearing voices? From my fridge?

. . . the time line . . .

. . . relief starts with you . . .

We have been known to keep food for years past its expiration, but I had thought that, in addition to nutrients, the spontaneous generation of sentient life would require heat and light. No, the relish and mustard looked quite silent and stupid.

Maybe it was the fridge itself talking. Engineers put voice chips into everything these days; maybe the fridge had a problem.

Relief starts with you?

I opened the freezer compartment just as the recording started up again . . .

You write it, they live it. As the timeline demonstrates, with the power of AcipHex, brand of Rabeprazole Sodium, you can help your patients experience relief from symptoms related to GERD throughout their treatment.

Yatta yatta. Someone had put an effing AcipHex brochure in the freezer!

Um.

Yeah, I did. Last week. Cuz I was sick and tired of hearing the damned thing yap away at me.

D.

PS: AcipHex has to have one of the worst trade names of all drugs. “Doctor, there’s something I need to know before I fill this prescription. Precisely what are the ass effects?”

Thirteen Doctors

Folks liked last week’s Thirteen so much (Thirteen Patients), I thought it would be fun to do one from the other side of the exam table. Without further ado,

Thirteen Doctors: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

sorry for the length . . .

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Thirteen patients

Apropos of yesterday’s discussion, and in the absence of any other bright ideas, I thought I would remember a few patients today. We’ll begin with me and go from there.

1. Me. I loved my pediatrician, Dr. Johnson. I especially loved taking off all my clothes whether he asked me to or not. When I became 9 or 10, my parents decided I was too old for a pediatrician and switched me to their GP, a guy I never liked. There’s something wrong with a dude who thinks it’s necessary to give a kid a rectal exam every time he sees him. But did my mom ever question him on this? Nope. And did he bother to wipe away the lube afterwards? Nope. The bastard.

2. My first history and physical was on a VA patient, a Korean war vet in his 50s who looked like your typical Silicon Valley businessman. We were instructed to ask everything. EVERYthing. And it was embarrassing as hell for this young med student to take a sexual history, and somehow worse still to ask whether he did any illicit drugs.

Imagine my surprise when he told me he did a few lines of coke every weekend with his pals.

3. Not long after, I had another patient, a young man with Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome due to alcoholism. He was in his 30s but he looked 50, and the only word he could say was “Beer.” Ask him how he got here, and he would smile, shrug, and say, “Beer beer beer.” Kinda funny, but really very sad.

4. Another Wernicke-Korsakoff patient: funny thing, both this guy and patient #3 weren’t depressed about their conditions. I wonder if that’s part of the psychosis — if so, it’s a bit of a blessing. (Alzheimer’s patients, for example, are often extremely depressed in the early and mid stages of the condition — understandably.) Anyway, this was back during the first George Bush’s presidency. When we did a mental status eval, we would ask questions such as, “What year is it?” “What city are we in right now?” and “Who is the current president?”

On that last question, my patient responded, “President Bushwhack.”

Obviously of sound mental status, politically speaking. Made me wonder if he was faking the rest of it 😉

5. She wasn’t even my patient. But she was eleven, had a family who loved her, prayed for her at her bedside every day, left prayers for her written in Hebrew, and she died of meningococcal meningitis. Life really isn’t fair.

6. I took care of her lacerated scalp following a traffic accident and she became my private project from then on. She wanted a new nose, I gave her a new nose. She wanted Julia Roberts’ lips, I gave her Julia Roberts’ lips. In exchange, she dressed like a vamp and shared Madonna’s photography book with me, the one with the airbrushed anus.

Nothing ever happened between us, but I suspect we both thought about it.

7. Skip back to med school for a moment. She was a young mom with a loving husband and she had a nasty breast cancer. (Yes, they’re all bad, but some are worse than others.) She wanted my opinion: should she do chemo, or not? My usual protestation (I’m only a med student, I don’t have the knowledge base to answer that question) didn’t wash with her. She wanted to know, if I were her, would I do it?

She couldn’t ask her family or friends. They only wanted her to live, and they would have had her do anything to get those extra few percentage points’ chance of cure. She needed to ask an impartial individual.

I told her I’d do the chemo. I wanted her to live, too.

8. I would be remiss if I didn’t link back to my dos piernas story. Considering the fact I based my romance on a real event (a med student who couldn’t manage to place a urinary catheter), that dos piernas story could probably inspire a trilogy.

9. During internship, every call night the nurses asked me to push Dilantin on Mr. M. He had been unresponsive since the mid-70s; for the past 17 years, all he ever did was grunt in response to pain. Every so often, he would get pneumonia or a bed sore and find his way back to County.

His head looked like a basketball that had seen too many decades on an inner city ball court. Scarred, patched, a war zone unto itself. He was a bull of a man, too. His family kept him well-fed through that feeding tube.

During the last month of my internship, he woke up, just snapped out of it wanting to know where he was, what had happened. I can’t begin to imagine his or his family’s emotions, but for us docs who had taken care of him, it was eery. He seemed like a time traveler . . . and, you know? We didn’t know whether to be happy or sad for him.

10. Flash forward five years. When I was one month out of training, this patient came to see me in the private practice office asking for a third opinion. Two ENTs had told her she needed sinus surgery: the self-perceived ‘top sinus surgeon of LA County’, and one of the top academic sinus surgeons in the area. All I knew was that she’d had an abnormal finding on her sinus CT, discovered when she’d had a head CT for her headaches.

So she had seen some of the best talent in the area and they both agreed she needed surgery. What could I possibly add to this discussion?

I took one look at her CT scan and started laughing. She didn’t need surgery — she just needed an honest ENT. Her only abnormality was a maxillary sinus mucus retention cyst. These are incredibly common and rarely symptomatic.

Moral: don’t hesitate to get those second (and third) opinions, people.

11. You occasionally save lives in medicine — it’s inevitable — but you don’t expect to forget the patients you save. She approached me in a local restaurant, said, “Are you . . . are you Dr. Hoffman?” I’m thinking, What did I do wrong now? Nothing, it turns out. I had ordered an MRI scan on her five years ago and discovered her benign (but life-threatening) tumor. I’d changed her life. And now, I didn’t even recognize her.

12. Sometimes you know in your bones that it’s bad. The sound of a patient’s voice, or a constellation of symptoms that can only mean one thing. Worst of all is when the patient is a child and you hope you’re wrong but you know you’re not.

One came in soon enough that a prompt diagnosis made a difference.

One didn’t.

13. He had a terrible diagnosis, the worst. The one that kills you within a month no matter what you do — surgery, chemo, radiation, this tumor laughs at everything and grows. And grows.

I brought him and his family into the office and told them everything. I asked my patient if he had any unsettled family business, like estranged family members he should square with. He didn’t, but he did have a son in Europe in the military. I wrote a letter. We faxed it to the son’s C.O. If I remember correctly, his son was back home within the week.

He died soon thereafter, as expected. There was nothing I or any other doctor could do about it. And yet I feel more pride in that case than in anything else I’ve ever done in medicine.

Leave a message in the comments, and I’ll give you some cool linky love below.

Kate’s 13 favorite pictures

Darla’s beautiful and neurotic mind

Trish’s 13 in-yo-faces

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D.

Is that an otoscope in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?

In response to the first few hundred words of my novel’s opening scene, Caltha writes:

That’s just gross. Is it supposed to be gross? I understand it’s supposed to be funny, but I’m sorry, the subject just bothers me too much. You claimed to be sensitive in a previous post, but obviously not sensitive to the suffering of this young woman. She is in an extremely vulnerable position and moaning in pain, and you just make fun of her and let your hero regard her as nothing but a pice of meat? That’s just sad and bothering. If any doctors are anything like that it’s not the subject of comedy and they shouldn’t be allowed anywhere near female patients. And just fyi, I don’t consider myself sensitive and I laugh at most kinds of sick humour, but the way the young woman is treated in this piece of text is just too sad.

Is the opening gross? Insensitive? Is Brad mistreating his patient, as Caltha suggests? I don’t think so, but I’m willing to listen to arguments.

I intended the opening to be uncomfortable for readers who aren’t accustomed to thinking of their doctors as sexual animals. I want those readers to snap out of their blinkered view, and I want them to do it quickly. The novel focuses on the suppressed sexuality of the hero and heroine, as well as their development as doctors. This suppression pops up (literally) at inopportune moments for Brad; Lori, on the other hand, isn’t even willing to admit to herself that she’s a virgin. If I’m exploring their sexual and emotional growth, the last thing I want to do is ignore their sexuality.

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Live blogorama tonight!

Beth kicked me in the ass for not posting to the Boogerz blog asked me an ENT question, which I answered over at the Boogerz blog: how do you tell if your cold is more than just a cold? Excellent question. I hope I did it justice.

I’ll try to go live tonight by 7:30 PM. Hope to see y’all tonight — we’ve been having some great live blogs lately.

D.

Thursday Thirteen: a medical quiz

We did the up-close-and-personal getting-to-know-me stuff last week. This week, let’s just have some fun. No fair googling the answers.

1. For starters, name the pierced structure:

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In extremis: the case of Anna Pou, M.D.

Let me extend a BIG Balls and Walnuts welcome to Crooks and Liars readers. Yes, you get the BIG Balls (and Walnuts) howdy-do. Come for the political commentary, stay for the Duggary goodness.

***

I may be tardy to the Hurricane Katrina blogswarm (explained by Shakespeare’s Sister), but better late than never. Thanks again to Blue Gal, who kicked me in the butt suggested I post something pertinent.

Anna Pou, M.D., is an ENT (ear, nose, and throat doc) who, during the Katrina debacle, volunteered to stay behind to provide basic services to the patients of Mercy Hospital. Last month, Louisiana Attorney General Charles Foti had Dr. Pou and nurses Lori L. Budo and Cheri Landry booked with four counts of second-degree murder. They are accused of euthanizing patients with morphine and Versed (midazolam).

Kevin, M.D. has excellent coverage of the story. Suffice it to say that the facts of the case are unclear, so (in my opinion) the more savvy commentators are reserving judgment.

I’d like to give you my thoughts on this as an ENT and as someone who has worked at a County Hospital under less than ideal circumstances.

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To sleep

Residency training teaches us docs to function on little or no sleep. Although I have a lifetime of experience with sleep deprivation and insomnia, I must say residency gave me a thorough understanding of all degrees of sleeplessness. For example, it is far better to go without sleep than to get one hour of sleep. Nothing matches the malaise of one hour of sleep.

Two hours of sleep — now that ain’t half bad. On two hours, I could get all the ward work done and be primped for afternoon rounds. I would collapse when I got home, but I’d still be fresh and ready to go the following day. I’d get the work done without mistakes, too. I never made any serious mistakes until my chief year, but that’s another story.

But to feel really human you need to dream, and for that, two hours barely cuts it. Three or four at a minimum, which gives my mind time to spin its wheels and work out all the crazy shit.

Now that I’m out in the real world, all this sleep deprivation has little impact on my patients. I know I’m not as personable when I’m tired. It’s hard to care about people when I’ve been coasting along, four hours of sleep (or less) each night for three or four nights running. It’s even hard to fake caring about people (and, here’s a carefully guarded secret: docs fake it a LOT. Which is, I suppose, better than not bothering to fake it at all).

No, the rough stuff takes place inside my head, where creativity is the first casualty, temper the next. After that, my thought processes fall apart. But hey, I’m a seasoned insomniac, I know well enough to ignore the self-destructive batshit which starts crowding out everything else. I remind myself of the things I consider true when I’m well rested.

I feel a little like that character in Memento who tattoos himself with the basic facts of his existence since he forgets everything each evening. My tattoos would read:

This is your family. They love you, you love them.

This is you. You’re an okay guy, especially after seven hours of sleep.

And, bottom line, in the universe of disease, insomnia isn’t that bad. I meet people every day who cope with far worse. How do they deal with it? The same way any of us deal with it — we just do. Because the alternative sucks monkey balls.

Yet I wonder if one day I’ll wake up in my car on a road a thousand miles away, not recognizing any of the street names or landmarks, wondering how I got there. But even that wouldn’t work. You can’t drive out of your own head.

D.

I wonder what he’ll fetch on eBay?

I could spend a ton of time thinking up a cute name for this — Cyrano deTomato? But what’s the point. It is what it is, a tomato with a nose.

One of these days, I’ll do a photo essay on all the goofy and wonderful things patients have given me over the years. This tomato ranks right up there.

In residency, I had a patient who brought me the most godawful ties. You wouldn’t even hang one of these on a dorm room doorknob, they were that fugly. Back then, another patient gave me what I call my “animal tie,” which is still my favorite tie.

And then there are the woodcarvings, countless blue frogs, wallet-sized school pix from my pediatric patients, and artwork so ugly we hide it above the audiology booth.

Around these parts, folks bring in jars of smoked salmon and fresh crabs, when they’re in season. That’s always a treat. No one has written me into their will yet, but I keep hoping, greedy bastard that I am.

D.

Hospital life

As promised, here’s a photo of me unselfishly guinea-pigging myself for the greater good:

It’s a good thing I’m not a colorectal surgeon. I couldn’t show those photos. (Does that mean I have limits after all?)

***

‘Kay, so I got rid of the rest of this post because (A) I have a sneaking suspicion certain hospital folks lack a sense of humor (not you, Leann) and (B) making jokes about elderly, demented people is probably in poor taste. Even for me. Consequently, noxcat’s comment below no longer makes sense.

In any case, I’ve posted my 13, so you have plenty of other tasteless things to keep you occupied.

D.

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