Continuing from the previous post...
Tagging
Once you enter a department, you will be doing ‘tagging’ which usually last for 2 weeks for most departments, especially for a first poster. Working hours for a houseman generally starts at 7 a.m.. During tagging it’s usually from 7 a.m. to 10 or 11 p.m. everyday until you’ve been given off-tag.
So what do you have to do during tagging?
1. On the first day or the day before your first day into the department, go and introduce yourself to the Head of Department, and then to the ward’s Sister so that they know you’re coming.
2. Clerk as many patients as you can. Clerking means to get full history from the patients, do full examinations, come to a diagnosis and different diagnoses, plan and take related investigations and do your own plan of management for that particular patient. The more cases you see, the more familiar and comfortable you are with taking history & doing examinations. The more variety of cases you see, the easier it is to remember the management. Usually every cases will be seen by an MO after you finish clerking- learn to present properly, fluently and with confidence.
3. Learn and practice how to do procedures- basic procedures such as venupuncture, inserting branula, taking blood C&S using aseptic technique, inserting urinary catheter, inserting Ryle’s tube are all things that you are expected to be able to do by the end of your tagging. Paediatrics may be a little different; and some department also require you to be able to insert central venous long line, do peritoneal dialysis, wound debridement, inserting tibial/calcaneal pin etc.
4. Learn what form to fill for which investigation and which bottle to fill in. Learn how to trace the results. Learn to to refer cases and write referrals.
5. If you are in O&G, surgical or orthopaedic, learn to book/post cases for operation, how to fill in the form etc. Find out from your senior colleagues if there are special/extra requirements that you need to complete to be off-tag. This depends of the department and hospital you’re working in. For example, if you’re in O&G, you may need to conduct 10 deliveries and assist 5 C-sec to off-tag.
Expectations (Part 1)
Not in order of priority/importance, I’m writing this part as a fellow senior houseman who has passed her housemanship:- Niat: Please correct your intention of working in medical field. We are doing service-based job so we deal a lot with people with different attitude, expectations and behaviour. This can be very stressful but in the end there are only two things: we’re trying to help patients and we seek to find barakah in our job. My previous Dean of Medicine gave us this du’a and most of my colleagues and I recite this in our prayers: "O' Allah, please let us be the tool of Your Mercy in serving the humanity regardless of race, creeds and religions"
- Able to clerk cases and present: You have 3-4 years of clinical years to practice this. By the time you graduated, you ARE expected to be able to get the chief complaint(s) and rule out differential diagnoses and summarise the case.
- Able to recognize signs and findings in examination: Of course, this will help you in your diagnosis. So the more patients you see, the more signs you’ll find, the better you are at recognizing things. Do know basic stuff like normal vital signs values, heart sounds and murmur, different sounds during lung auscultations, neurological abnormalities etc. We need you to be able to elicit signs from patients.
- Attitude: Which is sometimes a major headache to senior colleagues, MOs and specialists. Do have the right attitude: be polite and humble. Don’t be arrogant. Basic rules as a houseman is "jangan berlagak terlalu pandai, jangan jadi bodoh sombong" or so to say. 'Menjawab balik', giving excuses and justifying yourself are all different- know who you are dealing with. If you don’t know, ask, ask and ask. Do NOT assume. Be polite to ALL patients and relatives even if you are tired and hungry- they don’t know that. Respect everyone including the cleaners, staff nurse, MAs, your colleagues, MOs, specialists, consultants. Sometimes it’s not easy when you meet colleagues who are not cooperative and not of exemplary behaviour- just recognizes who they are and avoid having that kind of attitude. Be friendly.
- Be a team-player: Know who your houseman leader, follow rules set by the department and be a team-player. If you have finished with your task, help your friends in need. If everyone help each other, you can finish ward work faster and everyone can go and eat lunch or rest earlier. Also, when you see your MOs doing round and are still around, even if your shift finishes at 5, wait till they say you can go home or something along that line, in case there are still works to be done. How can you go home earlier than your MOs/Specialist? -.-; The same goes if there are still a lot of ward work to be done and it’s already 5 p.m.... Finish your work first then you can go home with eased heart. Pass over if you need to know learn what kind of cases that need to be passed over
To be continued...
Next (final entry): Expectations [2]
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