Monday, December 30, 2013

Lansing's Own Beerfest

In October 2008, I had the adventure of a lifetime and got to go to Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany! It was one of the craziest and funnest days of my life.  So, when my friends approached me about going to another Oktoberfest that was a little more local, how could I turn it down? So, this past October... thats right folks...I got to go to the one, the only, Lansing Beerfest! *crowds cheer*

Ok ok...this Oktoberfest was definitely much smaller than the one in Germany. It had less beer options and less German entertainment. However, it was close, it was cheep, and it had enough beer and german food to make my heart and stomach happy!

We arrived about the hour after the event started. One of my friends found this great deal on groupon...so instead of paying for 4 tickets, we only had to pay for 2! When we entered, we were given enough tickets for 1 drink and our drinking mug that we would take from beer station to beer station. All together, I think we stayed for about 4-5 hours. I had a lot of fun and it was such a great break from the struggles that were my life on my surgery rotation!

Michelle's dog Kuma wanted to come...he even had a costume!

























Justin Timberlake Concert

Hello readers! Like I mentioned a while ago, I have been so crazy busy the last 6 months that I have SUCKED at blogging...so now that I am on Christmas break (woo!!), its finally time to catch up.

So, here we go...

Way back in October, my musical hero (Justin Timberlake) came to Detroit to do a concert with Jay-Z. I unfortunately had to work, so despite how much I wanted to go to the concert, I knew that it was a no go. Three days before the concert, I decided that I would request a switch in my schedule. Administration made it incredibly clear that we were not, under any circumstances allowed to change our call days, but for some reason, I thought I would just ask. At this point, we were 6 weeks into my 8 week Internal Medicine clerkship, so I knew the clerkship director pretty well. So, I decided to be honest...

Me: "Julie...If I needed to switch one of my call days this week, would I be able to"
Julie: "Under no circumstance are you allowed to switch your call schedule" .... *looks around and whispers *"Come ask me in my office in 10 minutes"

10 minutes later...I walk to her office....

Julie: "Ok. So, why do you need to switch your call day?"
Me: "I don't have a good excuse. There is a Justin Timberlake concert I want to go to in Detroit."
Julie: "Hrmmm...Ok I will switch it for you, just don't tell anyone"

So, by some miracle I got the day off, snagged last minute tickets and got to attend one of the best concerts of my life!


Pre-drinks at Hockey Town across from the stadium!

Excited that we have TICKETS!! 


My souvenir. 



*Sigh* I love JT. I will marry him one day, just you guys wait!

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Specialty Search: Internal Medicine

My first rotation of 3rd year: Internal Medicine.

I had requested this clerkship to be in slot #1 for a few reasons. First, I figured I would hopefully not sounds like a total idiot, having just come off of Step 1 studying; this unfortunately didn't matter and I now realize that I was going to sound like an idiot no matter what, but at least I tried. Second, I figured having this first would set me up well for all of the rest of the clerkships. Finally, I didn't think that there was any chance that I would like Internal Medicine enough to make it my lifelong profession, so why not take it first?

What I loved:
1) Amazing diversity of cases - Every patient was so different; loved seeing the rare and and interesting diseases I didn't think actually existed in my patients!
2) In patient setting - The really really really sick patients (meaning interesting/complicated cases) are all in-patient. So, the fact that the clerkship was 6 weeks in patient, 2 weeks outpatient was a BIG plus for me!
3) Knowing everything about your patients - IM doctors are the main provider for their patients. So, these doctors know their patients medical history inside and out. Unlike the other fields I have been exposed to, which only really care about the organ they specialize in, IM peeps look at the patients as a whole and know every little detail...its pretty awesome actually.
4) Flexibility on what/where you practice - IM has about 123928109 different sub-specialties and about 230432840 different settings you can work in. From a general internist that works mostly out patient to a cardiologist who does mostly in patient procedures, IM truly has so many paths. So, for someone like me who is indecisive on what they want to do, this is very appealing.

What I didn't love:
1) No pediatrics/obstetrical patients - Lets be real. I LOVE babies. I love teenagers. I love pregnant women. I love sexual health. So, the biggest thing that turns me off on IM is that this is the field that has none of these patients. Any time there is a kid, they are sent to family med or peds. Anytime there is a pregnant lady, they are sent to family med or OB/GYN. So, literally my two favorite patient populations are not included in IM. Big bummer.
2) No procedures. None. I literally did not do a single procedure on my two months of IM. I know there are some sub-specialities like cardio and GI that are more procedure-based, but getting to that means a lot of non-procedural rounding days. Don't know if I can handle that.
3) Talking, instead of doing: So.Much.Rounding. Literally all day is rounding. Sometimes it felt like we were discussing problems really thoroughly and spending a lot of time conceptualizing what was wrong with the patient, but that work didn't really translate into much improvement in the patients care. Obviously thinking about medical problems is important and the basis of medicine, but all day? It was too much.

So, overall...Internal Medicine was a great experience. I actually really did enjoy it a lot. I am unsure that this is my future profession, but I havent completely ruled it out!

Saturday, October 26, 2013

I'm BACK!

HELLO! After a ridiculously long hiatus, I'm back! I know I have been a terrible blogger and have been absent for *gasp* almost 3 months,  but I am back to blogging and promise to be much better in these next months!

I'll write lots of individual blogs to catch up on things, but here are just a few things I plan on updating you all about:

1) Specialty Search: Internal Medicine
2) Justin Timberlake/Jay-Z Concert (woot!)
3) Oktoberfest meets Lansing, Michigan
4) Specialty Search: Surgery

So, lets get started! :)

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Cake Pop Fail

Tomorrow is the end of my 3rd week on Internal Medicine! I have spent these last three weeks with the same group of 3 residents. Sadly, tomorrow all of the residents are done with their first block of of the year and will be moving on to new services. So, to show my appreciation, I thought I would make some cupcakes. THEN, I got a brilliant idea. Whats better than cupcakes? CAKE POPS! Of course, I have never made cake pops...but how hard could they be?

Here is my journey towards making the most perfect cake pops.


Step 1: Get all of your supplies ready!

Step 2: Bake the perfect cake.

Step 3: Crumble up the perfect cake and mix with frosting. Put them in a circular dish so that they form cake-ball structures. 



Step 4: Decorate by putting a which chocolate coat around the cake pop and decorate with colored frosting.

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The result of all of this hard work (3 hours worth of baking):


Tada!!


....Cake pop fail. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

First Few Days of Internal Medicine

3 days down, hundreds of day to go left of third year!

It has been quite the crazy last few days. From having my first clerkship orientation, to learning everything I would ever want to know in a 2-day 8 hour ECG work-shop, to having my first patients, to learning to navigate the EMR, and to finding out my score of just a little thing called Step 1 (but I'll get to that later).

Day 1: Monday morning, I went to Sparrow Hospital at 8 AM (which seems so late in the day now). We met with our incredibly nice clerkship coordinators in the morning to go over 1) the clerkship calendar, 2) all of the requirements, 3) how to honor, and many more important topics. It was amazingly informative. After the orientation, our little group of 5 students on the Medicine clerkship had 5:2 attention during a 5-hour ECG workshop (part 1) with two amazing Internal Medicine docs. They used the socratic method and basically put up and ECG, called us up to the overhead and made us interpret them even though we had absolutely no idea what was going on. Eventually, however, ECGs became (dare I say it) fairly easy to read and I know feel (somewhat) confident in how to interpret them! Who would have guessed? After the ECG workshop, we got a quick introduction to all of the different cases and logs we would have to complete on various websites and then got to have the rest of the afternoon to start reading and register for all of the millions of websites and research tools we needed to register for.

Day 2: Our first day with patients!!!! Gahh...I was so nervous. I went up to the 8th floor of Sparrow Hospital at about 7:10 AM. We were supposed to be there by 7:15 for morning report (where the night shift docs hand off the patients in a very systematic way to the daytime docs). I didn't really know what was going on for the first hand-off, but I think I did a good job pretending by jotting down notes in the margins of our patient list. After hand-off, the resident looked at me and told me to "go see the patient in room ***." And that was it...no shadowing, no introductory patient... I was just told to go see the patient and report back when it was time to round with the attending. I spent 1.5 hours with my first patient. I know, I know this sounds like an ABSURDLY long time to spend with one patient...but I am not efficient yet and I don't know whats important, so I pretty much got this guy's life story, which was quite fascinating. After doing a history and physical exam on my patient, I headed back to the resident room, checked some of his info on the EMR, went to meet with the attending, and gave my first real oral presentation (talk about nervous!!!). Much to my surprise, the oral presentation went really well! After all of the patients had been discussed and we had come up with plans for each of the patients, we rounded as a team to each of the patients' rooms with the attending physician to further speak with the patients. It was a really amazing first day of rounding and I learned a TON. I thought I was going to absolutely hate internal medicine, but I've loved it so far! After rounding, we headed back to a lecture room and finished our last few hours of ECG work-shop (part 2).

Day 3: Today was crazy fast-paced. I got in a little earlier (6:55ish) to look up my patients, but quickly ran out of time. By the time morning report and a quick resident-given lecture about acute COPD exacerbation was complete, it was 9 AM and I had only 30 minutes to round on 3 patients! 3! This time yesterday, I spent 1.5 hours on 1 patient! So, obviously I freaked out and didn't do well, but hey I guess its my second day and its not that big of a deal. I have learned my lesson and will show up earlier tomorrow! After a morning of rounding, we headed again to a lecture; this time it was split into a Q&A session (basically answering board-type questions in my little group of 5) and 30 min mini-lecture on anemias. Overall, it was a pretty good day, but I know that I need to get my s*#& together when it comes to rounding on my patients earlier/quicker/more efficiently, but I think that will come with time.

Oh...and something else that happened today...................I FINALLY got my Step 1 score. You know, Step 1..The exam that I spent a month intensively studying for. The exam that determines where/when I can do residency. Yeah, that exam thats kind of a big deal. We were told that the exam scores would be released to MSU early this morning. If we had failed, the school was going to page us to come in and talk about when we could retake the exam/whether or not we had to stop the current clerkship we were on. If we didn't receive a call, our exam scores would be released via email by 11 AM. So, I had to use all of my self control not to frantically check my email/text messaging every 6 seconds. Thank goodness that I had a busy morning, otherwise I think I would have gone crazy. Well, all morning I waited and waited...convinced that I would get a page. Finally, a little after 11 AM I got a text from a friend to tell me scores were up. I took that as I sign that I had passed and let out a HUGGGEEE sigh of relief. I decided a while ago that I didn't want to check my score for a while, but with EVERYONE around me telling me to check it, I finally gave in at around 4 PM. I made my friend Michelle stand with me while I opened it, because I was so terrified that I would burst into tears. So, after a few seconds of calming myself down, I pushed "view results" and closed my eyes. When I finally mustered up enough courage, I opened my eyes and *sigh* I could finally breathe! I was so so happy with my score. It wasn't the highest score I had gotten on a practice test, but it was close. Its a score that puts me significantly above average for most medical specialties, especially those that I am actually interested in. Its a score that puts me in a position that (according to the latest residency charting outcomes) "almost always grants an interview" at the majority of residency programs. So, yes. I did it! Such a relief. Good riddens, Step 1! I'm so glad that is officially over with!

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Third Year Orientation

Last week, I spent my first of many long days to come at Sparrow Hospital getting oriented to what my 3rd year would be like. To be honest, about 50% of it was common sense or things we have already learned (ex: dress code, professionalism, how to give an oral presentation), but the other 50% was pretty useful information. Most important of this information was getting trained on two different EMR systems, which are ridiculously confusing. Hopefully it doesn't take me too long to really understand the EMR during clerkships.

In addition to lots of talks about what to expect during third year, we finally got our finalized schedules. We had a one-on-one meeting with our clinical coordinator months ago, so we kind of knew what our schedules would look like, but only our first rotation was guaranteed. Overall, I got almost exactly what I wanted...so I'm happy. My schedule is as follows:

1) Internal Medicine (2 months)
2) Surgery (2 months)
3) Ob/Gyn (2 months)
*Winter Break*
4) Family Medicine (2 months)
5) Pediatrics (2 months)
6) Elective (1 month) [Not entirely sure what I'm going to do...maybe a research month? maybe anesthesia?]
7) Psych (1 month)

We were also given our swipey badges to have access to all over the hospital and to get out of the parking lot for free (woo!)... AND we were given our pagers! All of us immediately whipped out our iPhones to take pictures of our new pagers, 'cuz thats pretty cool. At least, it seemed cool until our Clinical Coordinator stated that "we must have these pagers on us 24/7 from now until you graduate." Then, my whole class collectively realized that maybe we shouldn't be as excited for something that we will surely get sick of very quickly!



Now that I'm done with orientation, I have realized that this is it. Tomorrow morning, I will be marching into Sparrow Hospital to start my very first day of third year with real doctors, real residents, and (most importantly) real patients. I am so nervous, so terrified, so excited, so eager...but I feel like this is normal for an incoming M3 that has absolutely no idea what to expect for the next 12 months. Wish me luck for my first day!