ABSTRACT
Traced sufficiently remotely, all people, profanum vulgus, share a common familial and linguistic heritage. Several Occidental and Oriental religiophilosophical traditions and General Systems (neuro-linguistic/neuro-semantic) Theory propound that resolution of personal illness and intra- and inter-generational psychological conflicts among individuals and within society mandates a figurative, if not a literal return, to the source of conflict or contention-to RE-MEMBER with that source-if healing, peace, resolution, concord, solace, sustenance, and wholeness are to be achieved. Words that communicate effectively, linguistic symbols such as water and the cross, and the action of laying-on-of-hands are methodologies that reaffirm a personal commonality among all traditions and facilitate RE-MEMBRANCE. For those who adhere to the Judeo-Christocentric tradition-who are called and chosen to witness and serve through the sacrament of baptism-healing, support, and sustenance are achieved by RE-MEMBRANCE through the Triune God.
Subject(s)
Linguistics , Religion , HumansABSTRACT
The concept of core competencies in graduate medical education was introduced by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education of the American Medical Association to semiquantitatively assess the professional performance of students, residents, practitioners, and faculty. Many aspects of the career of J. Marion Sims, MD, are exemplary of those core competencies: MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE: Author of the first American textbook related to gynecology. MEDICAL CARE: Innovator of the Sims' Vaginal Speculum, Sims' Position, Sims' Test, and vesico-/rectovaginal fistulorrhaphy; advocated abdominal exploration for penetrating wounds; performed the first cholecystostomy. PROFESSIONALISM: Served as President of the New York Academy of Medicine, the American Medical Association, and the American Gynecologic Society. INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS/COMMUNICATION: Cared for the indigent, hearthless, indentured, disenfranchised; served as consulting surgeon to the Empress Eugénie (France), the Duchess of Hamilton (Scotland), the Empress of Austria, and other royalty of the aristocratic Houses of Europe; accorded the National Order of the Legion of Honor. PRACTICE-BASED LEARNING: Introduction of silver wire sutures; adoption of the principles of asepsis/antisepsis; adoption of the principles of general anesthesia. SYSTEMS-BASED PRACTICE: Established the Woman's Hospital, New York City, New York, the predecessor of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Center for the Treatment of Cancer and Allied Diseases; organized the Anglo-American Ambulance Corps under the patronage of Napoleon III. What led him to a life of clinical and humanitarian service? First, he was determined to succeed. His formal medical/surgical education was perhaps the best available to North Americans during that era. Second, he was courageous in experimentation and innovation, applying new developments in operative technique, asepsis/antisepsis, and general anesthesia. Third, his curiosity was not burdened by rigid adherence to old doctrines or antiquated theories. Fourth, he broadened his professional experience and knowledge by travels to renowned intellectual centers in Western Europe. Fifth, he was perceived as cautiously optimistic and judiciously positive as he interacted with patients, students, and colleagues. Courage, confidence, creativity, compassion, charisma, character, and controversy marked his career. His legacy is illustrative and exemplary of the core competencies fostered contemporaneously in graduate medical educational programs.
Subject(s)
General Surgery/history , Gynecology/history , Alabama , American Civil War , Cancer Care Facilities/history , Education, Medical/history , Female , General Surgery/education , History, 19th Century , Hospitals, Special/history , Humans , New York City , Posture , Social Problems/history , Surgical Instruments/history , Suture Techniques/history , Textbooks as Topic/history , Vaginal Fistula/historyABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To assess whether repositioning of ambulance stations in a rural county of Alabama can improve emergency medical services (EMS) response time to motor vehicle crashes (MVCs) without adversely affecting response time to non-MVC-related emergencies. METHODS: Using geographical information system software, locations of MVCs during a 9-month period in a rural county of Alabama were plotted on a map. A single ambulance station provided EMS for the entire county. Based on the number of ambulances serving the county and concentrated areas of MVCs, the county was geographically divided into two regions. A new ambulance station was assigned to each region based on high MVC concentrations and access to a major thoroughfare. The number of ambulances in-service did not change. Following establishment of both ambulance stations (redeployment), data were prospectively collected for EMS miles to scene, EMS time to scene, fatalities, and type of call (MVC vs. non-MVC) during a 9-month period (January 2006 to September 2006). The prospective data were compared with historical data (non-redeployment) from a similar time period (January 2005 to September 2005). RESULTS: During the redeployment period, 597 EMS calls were documented, 106 (17.8%) of which were MVCs. In all, 764 EMS calls were documented before the redeployment period, 62 (8.1%) of which were MVCs. During the redeployment period, the mean miles EMS traveled to an MVC scene was 8.6 miles versus 10.7 miles before redeployment (p=0.038). The mean time to an MVC scene was 8.0 minutes during redeployment versus 9.5 minutes before redeployment (p=0.03). During the redeployment period, the mean time to non-MVC emergencies was 8.6 minutes versus 9.2 minutes during the period before redeployment (p=0.27). CONCLUSIONS: Utilizing geographical information system software, EMS response time to MVCs could be improved in rural areas by optimal location of ambulance stations based on geographical highest concentration of MVCs and vicinity of major thoroughfares. This can be accomplished without adversely affecting response time to non-MVC-related emergencies.
Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic , Emergency Medical Services , Geographic Information Systems , Rural Health Services , Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Alabama , Ambulances/statistics & numerical data , Emergency Medical Services/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Rural Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Time FactorsABSTRACT
Reported herein is an experience with retrograde intussusception. The index case was a 25-year-old African American woman who was status post-multiple previous intraperitoneal procedures, including a truncal vagotomy, distal gastrectomy, and Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy for the treatment of gastric outlet obstruction secondary to type 2 peptic ulcer disease. The patient presented most recently with symptoms and signs of a high-grade mechanical intestinal obstruction. Preoperatively, computerized axial tomography revealed retrograde intussusception. Urgent exploratory celiotomy confirmed retrograde intussusception of a segment of the common channel just distal to the jejunojejunostomy. The jejunojejunostomy, including the nonreducible intussusceptum and intussuscipiens, was resected. The alimentary tract was reconstituted in conventional fashion. Light microscopic histopathologic analysis revealed acute greater than chronic inflammation, transmural edema, ischemia/necrosis of the intussusceptum, and hypertrophy of the intussuscipiens. Mechanistically, intussusception has been characterized as an internal prolapse. It usually is aboral/antegrade/isoperistaltic in direction with circumferential intraluminal invagination/prolapse/propagation/telescoping of the proximal/cephalad intussusceptum into the distal/caudad intussuscipiens. Retrograde intussusception is the reverse. More specifically, retrograde intussusception is adoral/retrograde/antiperistaltic in direction with circumferential extraluminal exvagination/propagation/telescoping of the proximal/cephalad intussuscipiens over and around the distal/caudad intussusceptum. We speculate that suture lines, staple lines, adhesive disease, and incomplete closure of mesenteric defects are proximate and determinant causes of retrograde intussusception.
Subject(s)
Gastric Bypass/adverse effects , Intussusception/etiology , Adult , Anastomosis, Roux-en-Y , Female , Gastric Outlet Obstruction/etiology , Humans , Intussusception/diagnostic imaging , Intussusception/surgery , Peptic Ulcer/complications , Tomography, X-Ray ComputedABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to prospectively evaluate a protocol that assesses the efficacy and sensitivity of clinical examination in complement with computed tomographic (CT) scan in screening for cervical spine (c-spine) injury. METHODS: During the 26-month period from March 2005 to May 2007, blunt trauma patients older than 13 years were prospectively entered into a study protocol. If patients were awake and alert with Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) >or=14, clinical examination of the neck was performed. Clinical examination was performed regardless of distracting injuries. If the patient had no complaints of pain or tenderness, the cervical collar was removed. Patients with complaints of c-spine pain or tenderness and patients with GCS score <14 underwent CT scanning for evaluation of the entire c-spine. RESULTS: One thousand six hundred eighty seven patients were prospectively assessed for blunt c-spine injury. Fourteen hundred thirty-nine patients had GCS score >or=14, 897 (62%) of which had a negative clinical examination of the c-spine and subsequently had cervical collars removed. Two patients (0.2%) whose clinical examination results disclosed nothing abnormal were later found to have a c-spine injury. Five hundred forty-two patients with GCS score >or=14 had a positive c-spine clinical examination, of which 134 (24%) were diagnosed with c-spine injury. One hundred thirty-three (99%) c-spine injuries were identified by CT scan. The c-spine injury missed by CT scan was a radiologic misinterpretation. For patients with c-spine injury with GCS score >or=14, both sensitivities of clinical examination and CT scan were 99%. Two hundred forty-eight patients had GCS score <14, of which 5 (2.0%) were diagnosed with c-spine injury. CT scan identified all c-spine injuries for patients with GCS score <14. CONCLUSIONS: In awake and alert blunt trauma patients, clinical examination is a sensitive screening method for c-spine injury. Clinical examination allows for the majority of blunt trauma patients to have their c-spines cleared safely without radiologic screening. Clinical examination in complement with CT scan is a sensitive and an effective method for identification of c-spine injury in awake and alert patients with symptoms of c-spine injury. CT scan is the sensitive and effective test for screening and diagnosis of c-spine injury in blunt trauma patients with altered mental status.
Subject(s)
Cervical Vertebrae/injuries , Physical Examination , Spinal Injuries/diagnosis , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/diagnosis , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cervical Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Glasgow Coma Scale , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity , Spinal Injuries/diagnostic imaging , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/diagnostic imagingABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: Rural emergency medical services (EMS) often serves expansive areas that many EMS personnel are unfamiliar with. EMS response time is increased in rural areas, which has been suggested as a contributing factor to increased mortality rates from motor vehicle crashes (MVCs) and nontraumatic emergencies. The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of a global positioning system (GPS) on rural EMS response time. METHODS: GPS units were placed in ambulances of a rural EMS provider. The GPS units were set for fastest route (not shortest distance) to the scene that depends on traffic lights and posted road speed. During a 1-year period from September 2006 to August 2007, EMS response time and mileage to the scene were recorded for MVCs and other emergencies. Response times and mileage to the scene were then compared with data from the same EMS provider during a similar 1-year period when GPS technology was not used. EMS calls less than 1-mile were removed from both data sets because GPS was infrequently used for short travel distances. RESULTS: During the 1-year period before utilization of GPS, 893 EMS calls greater than 1 mile were recorded and 791 calls recorded with GPS. The mean EMS response time for MVCs was 8.5 minutes without GPS and 7.6 minutes with GPS (p < 0.0001). When MVCs were matched for miles traveled, mean EMS response time without GPS was 13.7 minutes versus 9.9 minutes with GPS (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: GPS technology can significantly improve EMS response time to the scene of MVCs and nontraumatic emergencies.
Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic , Ambulances/organization & administration , Emergency Medical Services/organization & administration , Geographic Information Systems , Rural Health Services/organization & administration , Alabama , HumansABSTRACT
Fatality rates from rural vehicular trauma are almost double those found in urban settings. Increased emergency medical services (EMS) prehospital time has been implicated as one of the causative factors for higher rural fatality rates. Advanced Trauma Life Support guidelines suggest scene time should not be extended to insert an intravenous catheter (IV). The purpose of this study was to assess the association between intravenous line placement and motor vehicle crash (MVC) scene time in rural and urban settings. An imputational methodology using the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Crash Outcome Data Evaluation System permitted linkage of data from police motor vehicle crash and EMS records. Intergraph GeoMedia software permitted this linked data to be plotted on digital maps for segregation into rural and urban groups. MVCs were defined as rural or urban by location of the accident using the U.S. Bureau of Census Criteria. Linked data were analyzed to assess for EMS time on-scene, on-scene IV insertion, on-scene IV insertion attempts, and patient mortality. Over a 2-year period from January 2001 through December 2002, data were collected from Alabama EMS patient care reports (PCRs) and police crash reports. A total of 45,763 police crash reports were linked to EMS PCRs. Of these linked crash records, 34,341 (75%) and 11,422 (25%) were injured in rural and urban settings, respectively. Six hundred eleven (1.78%) mortalities occurred in rural settings and 103 (0.90%) in urban settings (P < 0.005). There were 6273 (18.3%) on-scene IV insertions in the rural setting and 1,290 (11.3%) in the urban setting (P < 0.005). Mean EMS time on-scene when single IV insertion attempts occurred was 16.9 minutes in the rural setting and 14.5 minutes in the urban setting (P < 0.0001). When two attempts of on-scene IV insertion were made, mean EMS time on-scene in the rural setting (n = 891 [2.6%]) was 18.4 minutes and 15.7 minutes in the urban setting (n = 142 [1.2%; P < 0.005). Excluding dead on-scene patients, mean EMS time on-scene when mortalities occurred in rural and urban settings was 18.9 minutes and 10.8 minutes, respectively (P < 0.005). On-scene IV insertion occurred with significantly greater frequency in rural than urban settings. This incurs greater EMS time on-scene and prehospital time that may be associated with increased vehicular fatality rates in rural settings.
Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/mortality , Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Catheterization, Peripheral/statistics & numerical data , Emergency Medical Services/statistics & numerical data , Rural Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Wounds and Injuries/therapy , Alabama/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Male , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Time Factors , Wounds and Injuries/mortalityABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess whether higher roadway speed limits and excessive vehicular speed were contributing factors to increased rural vehicular mortality rates in the State of Alabama. METHODS: During a 2-year period from January 2001 through December 2002, data were collected from Alabama police crash reports and EMS patient care reports. Police crash reports and EMS patient care reports were linked utilizing an imputational methodology. Vehicular speeds were estimated speeds extracted from police crash reports. Vehicular speeding was defined as estimated speeds greater than posted speed limits. RESULTS: A total of 38,117 reports were linked. Of those, 30,260 (79%) and 7,857 (21%) were injured in rural and urban settings, respectively. The frequency of vehicular speeding was significantly higher in rural (18.8%) than in urban settings (9.4%) (p < 0.0001). At vehicular speeds less than 26 mph, mortality rates for occupants of speeding and nonspeeding vehicles were not significantly different in rural (1.68%, 0.82%) and urban (1.44%, 0.59%) settings (p = 0.78,1.0), respectively. On roads with posted speeds of 26 to 50 mph, mortality rates for occupants in speeding vehicles were not significantly different in rural (3.75%) and urban (2.23%) settings (p = 0.1360). For occupants of nonspeeding vehicles on roads with posted speeds of 26 to 50 mph, mortality rates were significantly greater in rural (0.72%) than in urban (0.35%) settings (p < 0.0032). On roads with posted speeds of 51 to 70 mph, mortality rates for occupants in speeding vehicles were not significantly different in rural (5.80%) and urban (4.95%) settings (p = 1.0). For occupants of nonspeeding vehicles on roads with posted speeds of 51 to 70 mph, mortality rates were significantly greater in rural (1.92%) than in urban (0.94%) settings (p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Vehicular speeding occurs with significantly higher frequency in rural settings. This imparts a greater overall vehicular mortality rate. At higher rates of speed, mortality rates for travel above the posted speed limit are similar in rural and urban settings; however, mortality rates for travel within the posted speed limit are greater in rural settings. This suggests factors beyond higher and excessive vehicular speed impart higher rates in rural settings.
Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/mortality , Rural Population , Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Alabama/epidemiology , Emergency Medical Services/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Medical Record Linkage , Retrospective StudiesABSTRACT
If statesmanship can be characterized as a bed rock of principles, a strong moral compass, a vision, and an ability to articulate and effect that vision, then the fortitude, tenacity, imperturbability, and resilience of William Crawford Gorgas cannot be overestimated. As Chief Sanitary Officer in Cuba and as Chief Medical Officer in Panama, he actualized strategies to eradicate the vectors of yellow fever and malaria. His superiors initially pigeonholed his requisitions, refused to provide him with any authority, and clamored for his dismissal. Nevertheless, with dogged persistence he created a coalition of the willing, who eventually implemented those reforms. As Surgeon General in the United States Army, he organized and expanded the Active Duty and Medical Reserve Corps in anticipation of World War I. Skilled university affiliated surgeons and personnel from throughout North America, manned base hospitals in Europe. Those lessons impacted upon subsequent military and civilian surgical care-organizationally, logistically, and clinically. He was universally recognized for his bonhomie, savoir-faire, modesty, discretion, decorum, courtesy, and graciousness. To those attributes must be added his devotion to duty, discipline, integrity, and authenticity, which characterized his leadership and statesmanship. Those attributes are most worthy of emulation and perpetuation by clinicians, academicians, educators, and investigators.
Subject(s)
General Surgery/history , Military Medicine/history , Military Personnel/history , Surgeons/history , Cuba , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Malaria/history , Panama , Preventive Medicine/history , United States , Yellow Fever/historyABSTRACT
Gogh, Vincent Van (1853-1890). The Starry Night. Saint Rémy, June 1889. Oil on canvas, 29 × 36 1/4â³ (73.7 × 92.1 cm). Acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest. The Museum of Modern Art. Digital Image © The Museum of Modern Art/Licensed by SCALA/Art Resource, NY.
Subject(s)
Brain , Creativity , Famous Persons , Neuroanatomy/methods , Paintings/history , Brain/anatomy & histology , Brain/physiology , History, 19th Century , Humans , MaleABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Deep sternal wound infections are a rare but serious complication after median sternotomy. We evaluated the incidence of deep sternal wound infection associated with two techniques for sternal closure. METHODS: In this retrospective case series, we recorded the method of sternal closure in consecutive patients undergoing a variety of cardiothoracic surgical procedures. Sternal closure in the historical control group was performed using trans-sternal, stainless-steel wire sutures; subsequent patients were closed using wire sutures in conjunction with a novel, peristernal cable-tie closure system to reinforce the corpus sterni. Perioperative care was standardized between groups. Demographics, risk factors, and postoperative outcomes were analyzed. RESULTS: Between July 2010 and July 2014, 609 consecutive adult patients underwent sternal closure following open median sternotomy at a single hospital in Mobile, Alabama. Sternal closure was accomplished with wire sutures in the first 309 patients and with cable-tie reinforcement in the subsequent 300 patients. Baseline characteristics were comparable between groups, except that the cable-tie group exhibited greater preoperative comorbidity. Mean body mass index was comparable between groups (30.2 ± 6.6 kg/m(2) wire suture versus 30.5 ± 7.7 cable-tie, p = 0.568). Deep sternal wound infection occurred in 2.6 % (8/309) patients in the wire-suture group, whereas no deep sternal wound infections were observed in the cable tie group (p = 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: The peristernal cable-tie system was a simple and reliable method for sternal closure after open median sternotomy, and was associated with a reduced risk of deep sternal wound infection, even in an obese and comorbid population.
Subject(s)
Sternotomy/adverse effects , Sternum/surgery , Surgical Wound Infection/therapy , Sutures , Wound Closure Techniques/instrumentation , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Surgical Wound Infection/etiology , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
A retrospective analysis of a prospective observational study of a cohort of patients who required prolonged foregut/midgut decompression/intraluminal stenting and/or enteral nutritional support was conducted. Those patients were intolerant of protracted nasogastric intubation. They also manifested hostile peritoneal cavities and therefore were not candidates for a laparoendoscopic gastrostomy or jejunostomy. Accordingly, they underwent insertion of a pharyngogastric or pharyngojejunal tube. With patients properly positioned and anesthetized and with attention to the anatomy of the superior carotid cervical triangle, those pharyngostomies and cannulations were performed safely and efficiently. The tubes remained indefinitely or were changed/removed ad libitum. Morbidity was nil and no mortality attributable to the procedure was observed. Pharyngostomy should be part of the armamentarium of all general surgeons.
Subject(s)
Decompression, Surgical/methods , Intestinal Obstruction/surgery , Nutritional Support/methods , Pharyngostomy/methods , Adult , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Middle Aged , Prospective StudiesABSTRACT
PURPOSE: How can the surgical disciplines (1) attract and recruit students of the highest capabilities and ideals; (2) ensure professional competency; and (3) maximize efficacy and safety of biotechnology translated to patient care? METHODS: Critique of the occidental humanistic literature. RESULTS: The imperative of mentorship is grounded in the philosophical traditions of occidental society dating from antiquity. CONCLUSION: This essay affirms that imperative in relationship to the surgical disciplines from an historical perspective.
ABSTRACT
Spigelian hernias, which represent <2% of all hernias of the vellum abdominis (abdominal wall) anterior, can be a diagnostic challenge for clinicians. Noninvasive imaging techniques, including ultrasonography (US) and computerized axial tomography (CAT), substantially complement clinical inferences based on interrogation and physical examination. Successful definitive care mandates comprehension of the regional, topographical, and visceral anatomy in axial, coronal, and transverse planes. Reported herein is the successful use of a bilayered prosthetic patch, advantageous because of its unimodular and biplanar configuration, to perform a tensionless herniorrhaphy.
Subject(s)
Hernia, Ventral/surgery , Anatomy/history , Hernia, Ventral/diagnosis , Hernia, Ventral/diagnostic imaging , Hernia, Ventral/history , History, 17th Century , Humans , Italy , Medical Illustration/history , Radiography , Retrospective Studies , Surgical Procedures, Operative/methods , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
A patient-physician relationship provides a milieu for a patient to achieve healing, solace, and reintegration of personhood. A patient's primary physician assumes a leadership role in that regard, coordinating and facilitating a regimen of analysis and therapy. The quality, quantity, and rapidity of technological advancements in the delivery of medical care, render any individual physician incomplete in terms of his ability to provide total care. Consequently, a succession of professional and paraprofessional personnel must be involved to maximize the care rendered. Nevertheless, a patient's primary physician must fulfill a leadership role as he coordinates consultations and interprets the data they provide, placing it in the appropriate situational context for his patient as part of a collective and mutual decision-making process. A patient's primary physician must be acknowledged to possess the power and authority to effect the care provided, as he must also accept the accountability, duty, obligation, and responsibility for the result of that care. By these means ambiguity and uncertainty are mitigated.
Subject(s)
Physician's Role , Physician-Patient Relations , Primary Health Care , Delivery of Health Care , Freedom , Health Care Rationing , Humanism , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Metaphor , Paternalism , Patient Care Team , Patient Selection , Personal Autonomy , Probability , Professional Competence , Referral and Consultation , Social Responsibility , Social Values , Uncertainty , VirtuesABSTRACT
A methodology of argumentation and a perspective of incredulity are essential ingredients of all intellectual endeavor, including that associated with the art and science of medical care. Traditio argumentum respectus (tradition of respectful argumentation) as a principled system of assessing the validity of beliefs, opinions, perceptions, data, and knowledge, is worthy of practice and perpetuation, because assessments of validity are susceptible to incompleteness, incorrectness, and misinterpretation. Since the latter may lead to ambiguity, uncertainty, anxiety, and animosity among the individuals (patients and physicians) involved in such dialogue, objective analyses and criteria are desirable. A tradition of respectful argumentation is a means to this end -- to maximize objectivity and minimize subjectivity as part of decision-making processes and to preserve the integrity of the participants in a patient-physician relationship. During such discourse one must always be cognizant of fallacious arguments -- material, verbal, and formal fallacies -- since they compromise the validity of assertions. This essay summarizes a classification of fallacious arguments, by definition and by example, predicated upon the intellectual tradition of Occidental Society; and advocates a tradition of respectful argumentation to nullify them.
Subject(s)
Communication , Medicine , Patient Care , Physician-Patient Relations , Physicians , Decision Making , Education, Medical , Ethical Analysis , Ethics , Ethics, Medical , Humans , Interdisciplinary Communication , Interprofessional Relations , Methods , Probability , Terminology as Topic , UncertaintyABSTRACT
Since beliefs, interests, needs and values vary among individuals, potential for conflict or dispute exists in all areas of human endeavor, including a patient-physician relationship. Conflict- or dispute-resolution requires diligent and directed negotiation, which ideally is amicable, efficient, and sustainable, if the participants acknowledge the identity, individuality, and integrity of all parties involved. In this essay a concept of principled negotiation is extrapolated to a patient-physician relationship and is exemplified by a case study. In addition, the validity of a concept of tract two diplomacy is discussed, relevant from the perspective of strained or fractured primary relationships.
Subject(s)
Communication , Patient Care , Physician-Patient Relations , Administrative Personnel , Consensus , Critical Illness , Decision Making , Economics , General Surgery , Humans , Methods , Patient Transfer , Patients , Physicians , Poverty , Probability , Referral and Consultation , UncertaintyABSTRACT
Many members of the medical profession in Mobile, Alabama, have exemplified a strong commitment to the education of their colleagues and successors, a tradition (L., traditio, "to hand over") that dates from the early 18th century. The Mobile General (city/county) Hospital (1830 to 1970) and its successor, the Medical Center, University of South Alabama (1971 to the present), were the institutional foci of those endeavors. Because it is individuals who create, design, and vitalize institutions, this monograph is an acknowledgment of the accomplishments of those who gave that endeavor purpose, direction, and meaning, particularly with reference to the evolution of surgical education. Numerous clinical and societal forces--cultural, economic, political, and social-influenced that evolution. This compilation gives attribution to a legacy of commitment to health and medical/surgical care, education, and research within southern Alabama.
Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/history , Education, Medical, Graduate/history , General Surgery/education , Surgery Department, Hospital/history , Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Alabama , Biomedical Research/history , Biomedical Research/organization & administration , Education, Medical, Graduate/organization & administration , General Surgery/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Surgery Department, Hospital/organization & administrationABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: To review and assess educational strategies and formats regarding communication with families/survivors in the aftermath of unexpected and untimely patient death. To propose an integrated curriculum designed and intended to foster proficiency, competence, confidence, and composure in relaying catastrophic information in the context of the professional experience of a cohort of seasoned surgeons. BACKGROUND: Unexpected and untimely patient death is emotionally and psychologically wrenching for families, surgeons, and healthcare providers. We have previously proffered that 2 distinct, but interactive, phases of response are relevant when communicating with a family before and after the event: a proactive phase intended to establish a positive therapeutic relationship with the family; and a reactive phase intended to respond to the family in a compassionate and respectful manner and to ensure self-care for the physicians and health care providers. STUDY DESIGN: Survey of a cohort of senior surgeons (membership of the Southern Surgical Association) and Surgical Residency Program Directors (membership of the Association of Program Directors in Surgery). RESULTS: Sixty percent of the senior surgeons surveyed had experienced unexpected patient death. They advised strategies to cope with that clinical situation commensurate with the core competencies of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education: Medical Knowledge: maximize objective information/data and minimize subjective opinion; Patient Care: critique the events and conduct postmortem analyses; Interpersonal and Communication Skills: honesty, empathy, and patience; Professionalism: provide emotional and psychological support to family and personnel with privacy and in a nonaccusatory manner; Practice-Based Learning and Improvement: preoperative discussion and documentation in the context of informed consent and advanced directives vis-á-vis risk-benefit, effort-yield, and benefit-burden analyses; and Systems-Based Practice: involve chaplains and hospital personnel. Thirty-six percent of the graduate surgical educational programs surveyed allegedly provided educational venues to enable surgical residents to cope with unexpected patient death, although the formats were not specified. CONCLUSIONS: Graduate, postgraduate, and continuing educational programs aspire to prepare physicians and surgeons for independent professional practice-scientifically, humanistically, and artistically. Incorporating educational strategies to enable graduates to cope with the emotional and psychological turmoil of unexpected patient death is relevant.
Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Death , Clinical Competence , General Surgery/education , Grief , Professional-Family Relations , Curriculum , Humans , Surveys and QuestionnairesABSTRACT
Physician clinical clearance of the cervical spine after blunt trauma is practiced in many trauma centers. Prehospital clinical clearance of the cervical spine (c-spine) performed by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel can decrease cost, improve patient comfort, decrease complications, and decrease prehospital time. The purpose of this study was to assess whether EMS personnel can effectively clinically clear the c-spine of injury in the prehospital setting. All paramedics from a single urban fire department were trained in clinical clearance of the c-spine. During the 14-month period from January 2008 through March 2009, clinical examination of the c-spine was performed by paramedics on blunt trauma patients in the prehospital setting. Paramedics immobilized the c-spine and delivered the patients to the University of South Alabama Medical Center. After trauma center arrival, paramedics documented their clinical examination of the c-spine in a computerized data collection form. Paramedic clinical findings were compared with trauma surgeon clinical examination findings and computed tomographic findings of the c-spine. All patients had prehospital Glasgow Coma Score 14 or greater. Patients were not excluded for distracting injuries. One hundred ninety-three blunt trauma patients were entered. Sixty-five (34%) c-spines were clinically cleared by EMS. There were no known missed injuries in this patient group. Eight (6%) patients who were not clinically cleared by EMS were diagnosed with c-spine injury. Trauma surgeons clinically cleared 135 (70%) of the patients with no known missed injury. EMS personnel in the prehospital setting may reliably and effectively perform clinical clearance of the c-spine. Further prospective study for prehospital c-spine clinical clearance is warranted.