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Coolest surgery I saw this week
I'm currently on my Trauma Surgery rotation and we had a complex case this week that was super interesting to watch and learn about! ✨ A patient came in with a perforated colon after a colonoscopy (a very rare, but unfortunate complication). We had to take the patient to surgery, make a mid
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 65 ครั้ง

Procedures I have done as a healthcare trainee
I loveeee doing procedures, I think it's so fun to use my hands when it comes to medicine. I know I definitely need to pursue a specialty that has a good amount of procedures in it! Here are a list of the procedures I have done during this past year in clinical rotations: 💉 Bursitis injecti
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 61 ครั้ง

Life as a Trauma Surgeon
Currently on my Trauma Surgery rotation and it's been super interesting, especially because the docs I work with run 3 different services! 🏥 Trauma Surgery - any trauma that comes into the hospital (most of the time it's due to some sort of car/motorcycle crash), they respond to! If any
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 62 ครั้ง

4 things I saw in the hospital this week!
Trauma surgery has been suchhh a crazy, but interesting rotation! Here are some of the cases I saw this week: ‼️ Fractured ribs from a motorcycle accident - took this patient to surgery and plated their ribs to help them heal! ‼️ Emergency c-section after a car crash - baby was only 22 weeks
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 50 ครั้ง

How I manage stress working in healthcare
I make time for the things I enjoy no matter what!!! Healthcare can so easily consume you and during my current rotation where I work 12 hour shifts and spend 2 hours driving each day as a commute, it feels like I barely have any time left for myself. In order to stay sane during heavy rotations li
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 55 ครั้ง

Reasons why being a medical scribe is so great!
1️⃣ Gives you exposure to medical terminology!!!! Learning medical lingo is like learning a whole new language. Scribing helped me become familiar with so many medical words that by the time I got to med school I had a much easier time understanding what was being taught because I knew what the wor
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 35 ครั้ง

What I've learned about teamwork in healthcare
There are soooo many people behind the scenes, working together on a patient's case, especially if you're staying in the hospital! You may not even know it, but a dietician, speech therapist, chaplain, social worker, or case worker may all be on your care team and stay up-to-date with what&
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 71 ครั้ง

Skills I'm building to become a future doctor!
⭐️ Good communication! Patients get the best outcomes when all the physicians on their team are all in the loop and up to date on the situation. So many times I've seen patients stay longer in the hospital than what's actually needed because of poor communications between the hospitalist an
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 75 ครั้ง

The biggest challenge learning medical terminology
For me, it's that so many medications go by 2 different names OR that certain diseases have various names as well 😅😅 Learning one name in medical school, but then getting to clinicals and learning that everyone calls a certain medication or antibiotic by a different name is so frustrating a
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 39 ครั้ง

A super important skill to know for healthcare!
Knowing how to read your own images!!! 🩻🩻 Although radiologists are experts at reading imaging, they are also human and make mistakes - often times missing things! Knowing how to read your own imaging is SUCH an important skill to learn that can help catch things that may not be in the radiologi
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 213 ครั้ง

DITL: Emergency abscess case, behind the scenes
If you ever have an abscess... ❌❌❌❌ DO NOT POP IT!!!!! ❌❌❌❌ This is what happened with my patient: She had an abscess that she popped herself because it was bothering her. She came into the hospital a few days later because the area had become so red, swollen, and infected from releasing
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 73 ครั้ง

When to ignore vital signs-lessons from a Doctor 👀
Monitoring vital signs is such an important job, but sometimes it doesn't tell the full story and even though vital signs are crucial to follow, sometimes it's best to ignore them! I had a pediatric doctor tell me once that when infants come into the hospital with RSV, it's common f
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 38 ครั้ง

2 things I learned in the hospital this week
1️⃣ Even though the things I see on a daily basis just feel like another day on the job, for someone else it may be the worst day of their life. Trying to remember that has helped me become more compassionate when talking to patients. I see cases like severe severe injuries from car crashes every d
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 102 ครั้ง

Procedures I've been doing in Trauma Surgery
Now that I'm on my Trauma Surgery rotation I'm getting to see and practice so many procedures - it's been great! Here are some of the common ones used almost every day: 🏥 Intubation - Aside from operating Trauma Surgeons run the trauma ICU too. This is where our patients go if their
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 62 ครั้ง

Lessons I've learned observing end-of-life care
💝 When patient families are deciding on what to do for end-of-life care, ask their physician the question, "Well what would you do?" it's such a hard question to answer. Every family is different in terms of what they value and the memories they made with the patient, that you can't
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 35 ครั้ง

Exam skills I'm building as a healthcare trainee
🩺 Looking at all body systems - head to toe! This won't be necessary as I progress in my training, but for now I'm working on examining every body system on each patient so I don't miss anything. I once missed JVD (jugular venous distention) on a critical patient because I forgot to loo
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 26 ครั้ง

What it's like monitoring post-surgery patients
Now that I'm on another surgical rotation, we see multiple patients per day that had a recent surgery and need to continue to be monitored daily until they can go home from the hospital. What does this look like? ⭐️ Every day we check the incision site to check for signs of infection (r
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 79 ครั้ง

SUCH an important skill when working in medicine!!
🏥 Knowing the patient's GCS! (Glasgow Coma Scale) This is suchhhh a frequently used assessment in the hospital to see what a patient's neurologic status is. It's made up of 3 parts, each with a scale from no response to full response: 1️⃣ Eye-opening Response 2️⃣ Verbal Respon
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 41 ครั้ง

Tools I use everyday working in the medical field!
🔨 UpToDate! This is like the Bible of healthcare. I am constantly referencing UpToDate for everything & anything! I love the "patient information" section they have too that simplifies the disease process in easier-to-digest words so that patients can also understand what's going on
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 21 ครั้ง

How I prepare for rounds as a healthcare trainee
In healthcare, rounds are when the provider (and anyone else on the patient's care team) stop by each patient's room to see how they're doing and to go over their treatment plan with them. As a medical student, my job is to show up to the hospital early to see the patients, presents tho
hennelie | med student

hennelie | med student

ถูกใจ 33 ครั้ง

ดูเพิ่มเติม
hennelie | med student
25กำลังติดตาม
1316ผู้ติดตาม
4910ถูกใจและบันทึก

hennelie | med student

student doctor 👩🏽‍⚕️🩺 💌: haweshennelie@gmail.com