When It Rains, It Pours

September 13, 2007

Today, I got the most important call in my medical career.  At 10:37 am, the Chief Resident of the PGH-Dermatology Section called me up to congratulate and welcome me to their residency program.  It was a culmination of what I had worked for during the last 4 years.  My first instinct was to call Eileen, one of my roommates in Med School and incidentally, applying in Derma as well.  She asked me specifically a week before that if ever they call me, I should let her know asap. Since 2nd year, the three of us have been daydreaming about this.  Groggy Eileen picks up the phone, and I tell her sorry but you have to wake up, like right now! Haha.. Because if ever the Section calls you and you still sound like you rolled out of bed, you might say something you're not supposed to say :) 

Then Tricia, my other former roommate, texted to congratulate me, I told her I'll be praying for you dear.  Turns out she got accepted as well. :) so 2 na from 18-D.  15 minutes later, it was Eileen's turn to call me.. That makes 3. 

I was hoping that our other classmates would get accepted in the program!  There were 10 of us from UP who applied this year making it more difficult because each of us had their own merits.  And we took the same exam as the Internal Medicine applicants.

4:30 pm My cellphone rings again.  This time, it was Dr. Fores, the Admissions Committee Chair from Makati Medical Center. Big time ito.  She was the one who told us that morning that at exactly 9 am, pens should be down and if you're still writing, they won't even bother to check your paper.  She continued with " This is a competitive exam.  If you are seated beside your friend and you help her with one question, you are helping her get that slot instead of you. Be conscious of the time also, you are given 1 and a half hours to finish this exam." Ok i thought. "We will contact you in the next 48 hours if you qualify so do not call us or bother our residents to ask what your score was." Mental note.

One look at her that morning, I got easily intimidated with the bling-bling and her demeanor.

Consultant: "Is this Dr. Monica Felise Jara? (buong name ko pa talaga) Congratulations for making it to the top 10 of our qualifying examination this morning.  Your interview is scheduled on September 22. at blah-blah" 

I let her finish but I was also happy. I said, "Thank you maam but I would have to decline my application in advance."

She says, "But why?" (sounding surprised)

me: Maam, I have just been accepted in another Residency Program.

Consultant: ah really what?

me: Dermatology maam

Consultant: yeah i know, but what training institution? (oo nga naman, ang labo)

me:  uhhh PGH po. (of course, feeling ko na at this point eh hindi ako bagay sa Makati Med coz I have been so used to PGH.. u either love PGH or u dont)

Consultant: Oh ok. Congratulations then.. I'll still be seeing you in the PDS Conventions... Congratulations again and thank you for letting us know in advance.

Wow, 2 training institutions.. I had dreamt about this.  My friends asked me before, "What if you qualify for both?  What will you say in the MMC interview?"  I still don't know actually what to say in MMC.  That was Plan B.  I cannot lie. Both institutions had very good programs.  But clearly, I had already made my choice. I spent the last 5 years in PGH and it taught me very valuable lessons, which I don't think I would get anywhere else.

                            

Career Talks

I watched Oprah 2 weeks ago when she announced that the program would present "the secret" to making more money, losing weight, finding the love of your life, and achieving job success.

The essence of The Secret by Rhonda Byrne is "the law of attraction." Everything in the Universe vibrates on a particular frequency. When you think in harmony with the frequency of something, you attract it to you. If you think about wealth, you will receive wealth. If you think instead about your debt, you will receive more debt. You attract what you think about; your thoughts determine your destiny.

According to this idea, we alone are responsible for each and every thing that happens to us, not because of the actions we take, but the thoughts and energy we project. 

So remember the process: ask, believe, and then receive.

To cut the long story short, I have been preparing for this for a long time.  When I entered Pisay for high school, I did it with the thought that I could enter UP Diliman easier then go to Medical school.  Just 4 days ago, I finally got my PRC license to practice Medicine in the Philippines.  I was only in Kinder when I said I wanted to be a doctor, and I worked hard all my life to get to where I am now.  Never mind the difficulties or intrigues along the way.  I viewed them not as a hindrance to my goal but as a challenge that I wanted to do better, to be better.

  My close friends all know that ever since 2nd year in Medicine, I wanted to be a dermatologist.  Hindi dahil sa kaartehan or dahil sabi nila benign. People think that going to the Derma means facials and getting injections or medications for your acne. I think they are misinformed.

I've had keratosis pilaris since I was a kid and ever since, I've been going to different dermatologists for half of my life.  6 UP-trained doctors to be exact.  It helped me deal with issues I had with myself and my self-esteem.  It helped me view and learn about my disease and I was literally "consumed" by it.  To the point that it was my goal in life to help patients who "suffered" as much as I did.

Fast forward to 2007.  Ive been contemplating on whether to submit my application to Dermatology in PGH even before the Board Exams.  That was how much I wanted this, even if I was unsure whether I would pass the boards. But at the back of my mind, I had no doubt we would pass after all the hard work we put into the 2 month review.

Less than a month ago, we took the same Internal Medicine exam as the 96 IM applicants and 58 Dermatology applicants. I tried to Study for it but who can read 2 volumes of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine in 5 days?  Certainly not me!

Last Wednesday morning (Sept 5), I had my interview with 7 PGH Dermatology consultants and the Chief resident... and that same afternoon submitted my application to Makati Medical Center.  Both Training Institutions have their own strengths but it has always been my goal to train in PGH.  Loyalty award na nga dapat eh!

I had coffee with Sir Norman last Sat and again his question for me was "Ano ba talaga gusto mo? Derma or PGH?" because I really didn't know what to do with my life. He offered me some options if I dont get accepted like working in a Pharmaceutical company, moonlighting, do Research, apply for a teaching position.  I wanted to do it all.. hindi ko alam kung paano.

I just came from Makati Medical Center today for their Dermatology Residency Qualifying Examination. It was a 100 item exam based on the book, Andrews' Diseases of the Skin which was scheduled from 7:30 - 9 am.  We left feeling bewildered by the questions.  It was partly my fault. I was reading around 30 pages only for four days. I knew that I had been trying to read close to 400 pages yesterday in an effort to cram information.  Most of the diseases in this book were foreign to me.  I had a lot to learn!

And as I was on Quirino Avenue on my way home, my cellphone rang. Unknown number.

"We're pleased to inform you that you have been accepted to the Dermatology Residency Program in PGH. Congratulations.. etc."

I froze for literally 5 minutes in disbelief. I wanted to shout for joy pero nahihiya naman ako sa Chief Resident baka isipin niya hehe ang jologs..

You can imagine my exhilaration now. Let me breathe for a moment to let it all sink in :) In 2 weeks, my life has changed.

congratulations doctors!

I spent the whole day glued to the television set and playing fish tycoon on my palm pilot. deliberately avoiding the computer.

8 am Eileen texted me that consultants from pgh will be playing on game ka na ba? something to take your mind off the boards... texted veena, came and jo about it.. veena said she already had a blunted affect... same here.. this is D-day!!! eileen was having palpitations, i was having chest pain.. no kidding!

9 am oprah - will smith, his kids and the real chris gardner

10 am the pursuit of happyness- a very inspiring movie..

1 pm watched oprah again, 1:30 pm talked to ate karla (my eldest cousin) about the boards... my mind couldn't think of anything else and i needed a distraction! she suggested starbucks but i think the caffeine wouldn't do me any good.

7 pm came was asking me if the results were out.. i suggested she ask somebody else to check.. i couldn't look at it myself so i asked lala to do it for me..

10:20 pm came sent me this msg: mb.com.ph

I KNEW WHAT THAT MEANT! shet eto na..

lala couldn't find the site... the suspense is killing me!!! scroll down please...

JARA, MONICA FELISE  AQUINO

reading my name made me jump for joy! hugging lala, ling and mama..  i immediately called my roomies who had no idea the results were already out.. i think eileen was crying/tearful, and was so thankful.. tricia was shouting for joy as well.

then a flurry of text msgs and phone calls...

congratulations batchmates!!! i'm soo proud of our class!!

congratulations sisses and brods!!! 100% Phi! congratulations to my ka-bunk-in came (#10) ang galing!!!

i can't begin to thank everybody enough for all your prayers, help in the review..  First to God because He heard our prayers and made it all possible.  He sent the Holy Spirit to guide us and prepared us not only mentally but also physically for this exam.

to my family especially my sisters and my mom who would send me inspiring msgs especially when i doubted myself.. to gio and his family for all their support and prayers.. thanks tetel for lending me your books.. ate karla and katz adan, maan es, kai tapawan for your reviewers!

to our resourceful sisses who have made all the diagrams, research, photox, checked our venues etc. the support Phi has given us are more than enough. To my tita susan and tita perly who were my 2nd moms when mama was out of town... my tito alex who woke up early for those 4 days to bring me to UE. to lala and papa for buying my baon for the exam. for doray, sir norman, sir ricky, mia, colleen, tin for their constant support through SMS.. thanks veena for letting us use your condo unit, hahaha (a.k.a. "prison") we literally breathed the same air for 3 weeks. to jo, veena and came for all the mnemonics and fun during our 2 month review. to jo's ate for letting us study in Napocor (feeling nag-ooffice kme dun last june) and treating us to lunch. sobrang dami kong gustong pasalamatan! thank you!! this is the best day of my life. finally my life long dream.. congratulations fellow doctors, our journey to the real world is about to begin.

Post-boards

"What did i learn from the board exams today? it's not the amount of books that you read.  What will matter now is whether you get the logic of the examiners or not. haha. Good luck to us!"

That was the text message i sent to some of my classmates last saturday after the surgery, pharma and medicine exam.  Post-boards.  It's not like it's a post-duty day knowing you have to go back to PGH.  Post-boards means basically, you're just in limbo. 

As much as I would like to rant about every typo, repeated question ( some questions were repeated 3x! and still i didn't know the answer to it) or useless information that they DO NOT teach in UP, I couldn't dwell on every exam knowing that there was another one after it.  It was after all, 4 days of exams.. Probably the most tiring, nerve-wracking experience I've had so far. The only thing i could compare my anxiety leading up to THE day of the boards was the OSCE we had in 2nd year med school where you had to do a physical exam on "patients" in front of a consultant. There was a time limit for every station and the sound of the bell at the end signals you had to move on to the next. All you had to was memorize this script for OSCE and our block/neuro group at that time even practiced on each other at reg's lolo's building along salas st.  But then again OSCE was peanuts compared to the boards. 

Weeks before the boards, there were "circulating tips" through text, study this, study that.  I never believed any of those would come out. A special thanks to the support of our sisses who painstakingly helped us get reviewers, borrowed books, and made diagrams for us.  The information which didn't really come out, i think were more important because during the review you go on thinking, I wish I knew this way back in 2nd year.. blah blah blah.. life would have been easier. And you understand pathology and physiology better now than when you were studying it way back when.  But biochem, i must say, was different from the other subjects.  The rare lysosomal disorders, glycogen storage disorders came out.  And good thing our favorite thing to do is know these weird syndromes that you can only read in books because for some reason unknown to me, the examiners love asking these!

Some of my friends have been experiencing chest pain 2 weeks before the boards.  I am amazed how I was able not to feel panic until 3 days before the boards.  Maybe because I took each day at a time. Maybe because we were praying the novena everyday. People have suddenly become religious during these past months.

What you could do is study for the next exam, and hope for the best.  And resist the temptation to look at the answers in between.  But unlike the OSCE where the bell signalled the end of every station, each exam was more difficult than the next making it hard for you to stay focused as the time passed by. 

It's funny because my dream last saturday night was we were vacationing in singapore (me, veena, jo and came) the sisses who I bunked-in with for the review, and we were asking each other where to go to next. In my dream, I told Veena we should go to Jurong Bird Park coz she likes animals. The dream felt so real to me that when I woke up at 5:15 am on Sunday, I was so disoriented then I remembered it was the last day of the boards.  My mind was already wandering off!

After 12 grueling exams begins the painful task of waiting for the results to come out.  3 long days... Gio and Doray have already sent their congratulations.  Came was reminding me of our study group's plan to eat in Spiral in Sofitel (the former Westin) and pig out on the dessert buffet.

Let me remind everyone, it aint over until the RESULTS come out.  I'm just glad the exams are done, and I was able to use the computer now.  First up, the salon for that much needed haircut, then read the new Harry Potter book and watch a movie tonight!  In the meantime, please pray for all of us. Please pray that UP has 100% passing this year!

new beginnings

first up, happy graduation and congratulations to my classmates in UPCM Class 2007 and the postgraduate interns of the Philippine General Hospital! We were practicing yesterday in Meralco Theatre.  Admittedly, the theatre was smaller than the usual venue (UP Theatre in UP Diliman).  We were going to graduate in a few hours... Excitement and some, relief, was evident from everybody's faces! 
As I was looking at the ushers and usherettes from the lower batches and from the frats and soros, I couldn't help but be sentimental.  I was an usherette myself since first year med for Phi and every year, I felt proud seeing my sisses and brods go up the stage and receive their diplomas and awards.  Now it's finally our turn! The feeling is surreal.  Again, here's to new beginnings to my batchmates!  Let's aim for  a 100% passing rate in August!


Noche Buena in OB

I spent my first Christmas Eve away from home this year. I was duty in the PGH OB-Gyne Labor Room and Delivery Room and the entire time I was wondering what feast my family would be eating later that night.. I had been rotating in OB the past month and considering it's a 2 month rotation, I must say that so far, it has not been that hell-ish. OB is considered by most PGH interns as the most dreaded rotation with Internal Medicine and Pedia not so far behind.

Maybe it's because we had 4 Christmas parties, the Lantern Parade, 2 Kris Kringles, and an interservice dance competition which we had to practice for several days with our OB residents.   They don't seem as "ferocious" as we thought they would be. (well, except for a handful!) It must be the Christmas spirit
that even the most stressed out individual would find himself humming to Christmas tunes.  I had 3 patients in the morning.. Even my OB normal case ended up delivering via outlet forceps extraction because the heart rate of the baby was dipping to as low as 60-90 several times! The baby's head would not descend even if the mother kept on pushing.  By mid-afternoon I was ready to sleep from exhaustion!  It was funny because our OOD (Obstetrician on Duty), Dr. Dy-Fernandez was already nearing term and as I was assisting her during one cesarean operation, she felt some discharge already.. Uh-Oh! Our OOD might give birth anytime now and she's still in the OR! Ang sipag!

Later I took some pictures of December 24 because unfortunately,  I was the intern picked to stay there because I had to do monitoring and BE/IV according to the preresident! huh? while everybody was out partying? grrr..

The Labor Room looked so clean! no blood, no lochia, no feces. the floor was shiny and the hall looked bright. no patients. Who wanted to spend Christmas Eve giving birth?

One hour later my co-intern called me to go up the OB residents' lounge to join everybody :) we had paella, lasagna, roast chicken, spaghetti, pancit palabok, fruit salad, pero shempre wala ng cake! hehehe. but we stayed there for 5 more hours because there were no patients downstairs. sharing gifts, stuffing ourselves with food, laughing and videoke till dawn.

Time to work again. 2 mommies came at 2 am. both primigravids! both unmarried, one 17 year old and a 19 year old. we had a running joke that we we're going to teach them Lamaze kc naman my patient kept on screaming! especially my patient who was crying at 4 am and some got irritated in secret because they were sleeping already. Malay mo si Baby Jesus yun so bad magalit sa mommy! The last patient gave birth before 7 am and everybody was coaching her to breathe properly.  By the end we were all clapping and rooting for her.  We told her that she should name her child Emmanuel. :)

It was a Christmas day like no other.  And one that I would not forget for years to come.

country girl, city girl

it's been 3 weeks since we stayed with our foster family in Barangay San Pedro, Sto. Tomas, Batangas as part of our community medicine rotation.  It's another weekend again and I find the shift in momentum as I drive through South Super Highway.. going back to the rat race that is Manila..

I could tell you that life in the province is much simpler, even if we don't have many of the comforts and technologies we find at home. no maid, no hot shower, no microwave oven.. bedtime at 9 pm- the night fading as the sound of big trailer trucks coming from Lucena and buses from San Pablo City pass by. As my blockmates Tiger and Paul would put it, "The Simple Life: Interns"  I have learned to cook and clean after 3 weeks.  My simple joys would consist of eating kalihim and ensaymada which cost 1 peso each from the nearby bakery, buy corn for 4 pesos and a plate of miki-bihon for 30 pesos.  I have learned to adapt and I have gotten used to waking up in a house not my own. 

There is nothing much to do except talk to the people, watch all the telenovelas and wander around. Most of the time we just walk around the barangay, along the Maharlika National Highway. We've never really gone elsewhere yet because my partner/housemate doesn't like going on gimmicks and our preceptor does spot checks every week. I feel the disparity when I go home to Manila... from kapeng Barako to Coffee Bean English Breakfast tea.  I just get the feeling that everything I have gotten so used to don't seem that essential anymore.

I challenged myself to spend less than 500 pesos in the community for a week.  It worked, and that already included a Hazelnut Latte in Seattle's Best, and dinner in Dencio's Tagaytay. And the momentum changes again.. here i go, back and forth... maybe if there are some things I will miss about Batangas, it will be the neighbors who bring me biko for merienda, the kids who wake me up early in the morning with their incessant singing, watching Deal or No Deal and eating the soft, pink freshly baked kalihim.  I've met really interesting people in Batangas, sometimes unconsciously I speak with their accent already and acquired the expressions they use.  There is something about this place that makes you forget who you were in the city.

In 3 weeks time, we'll leave Sto. Tomas and begin our OB-Gyne rotation... but until then, PGH seems to be nothing but a distant memory.

from the mouth of babes

im about to finish my pedia rotation in 2 weeks.. gone through the outpatient department, ward 9 (where incidentally, 10 months ago, i met gio!) and nursery. next week ill be rotating in the pedia ER (scary! toxic na naman)

my favorite so far, i have to say, is the nursery rotation! usually they're healthy and the mothers dont complain! unlike the ER or wards where they're frantic for obvious reasons.  basically our job in the nursery is to receive the babies from OB, suction the amniotic fluid and secretions, tactile stimulation, and thermoregulate.. do pediatric aging. and on our preduty days, go to the wards to check on the babies and advise the moms about the importance of breastfeeding, newborn screening and Hepatitis B vaccination.

sa dami ng nanganganak everyday, you see a wide variety of babies.. chubby, thin, hairy, bald, pale, brown, red, babies that look like coneheads and babies with perfectly symmetrical features. you know right away if their nose is matangos or pango. but one thing is certain, their cries seem to be in unison! some shrill-like..

the babies are covered in vernix (that white lard-looking stuff)and blood when they come out but after their hot bath in Johnsons top to toe wash, they're all so cute! like puppies who dont look like their smelly mommies! hehehe. my blockmate, tiger even started using the top to toe wash during duty hahaha... (para daw amoy baby!) well ,the babies in pgh share bassinets so if a tag is not placed on them right away, there could be a case of switcheroo... years later, "inay? bakit hindi ko kamukha mga kapatid ko?" hahahaha... niloloko nila yung mga mommies. "mommy tandaan mo na yung itsura ng katabi mo, baka mapagpalit yung babies niyo." bad!

but anyway, even after 24 hour duty, the best part about this rotation is carrying the babies and looking at them.. it's weird sometimes you end up talking to them coz you're the only intern there and you have no one else to talk to. when they cry, i try to carry them all one at a time and soon after they go back to sleep in my arms. naks! i was telling my HS friends last weekend about it, baka daw gusto ko na magka-baby! uhmm, no thanks! hindi ko pa ata kaya ang responsibility! and i tell my mom, "wow, 5 times ka nanganak!" she says "madali manganak, mas mahirap magpalaki ng anak." indeed...

the PGH moms also have stories to tell, 7th baby and counting, 1st baby and twins pa, 1st baby at 40 years old,  and tragic endings as well. i think ive seen 3 babies die during my duty. one in the nursery where i got to intubate the baby (ang liit ng airway!), two in NICU. and ive seen mga 6 twins, they're really tiny- some less than 2 kilograms each and the healthy ones- 3 kilograms. imagine carrying that much weight around for 9 months!

and i cant explain why i feel so sentimental when i go to the mom and show her the baby after the initial resuscitation. the content look on their faces. ika nga the miracle of life!

so if you have a baby and you need a babysitter, you know where to find me :) limited offer only! hehehe

Click, flash, and then darkness

We lost one of us today.. As the rest of the Philippines commemorate the death anniversary of Ninoy Aquino, the UP College of Medicine mourns the sudden loss of one of our co-interns.. Ads Mabalot was 23.

One week ago, we were duty-mates in the PGH Pedia Emergency Room, I was their Pedia OPD reliever. Nagkukuwentuhan pa kami noon in between seeing the patients. I wouldn’t have guessed that she was already sick at that time. We were both attending to a 15 year old female with craniopharyngioma who came in with seizures and decreased sensorium. We were trying hard to get IV access on this patient and did fluid resuscitation, pushing around 200 cc of NSS. The patient eventually died in the wards, due to an intracranial bleed.  But Ads looked fine to me, kahit toxic ang ER duty. Never rin siya mukhang haggard at that.

A few days after, some of our classmates recalled Ads going on triage in the Pedia ER (screening which patients are for admission, initially attending to them) even if she was already having high grade fever and diarrhea. She would just wear a jacket. But one thing was, she probably thought “I don’t want my blockmates to suffer if I’m absent today. Kasi wala naman magre-relieve on such short notice” as it would ruin the sliding duty schedule she herself had made. Apparently she had the fever symptoms 2 weeks prior but wasn’t one to complain about it.

How many of us interns have done exactly the same thing? Ignoring our own symptoms, our own pain, in order to attend to our patients. How many of us have gone on duty even if we had fever, body aches, sore throat, cough and colds? I bet all of us, at one point or another, have disregarded our own symptoms. Med students think this way “if fever lang yan, I could get Paracetamol for that. Diarrhea eh di Loperamide and Oral rehydration salts para hindi ako abutan sa ward.” After all, doctors make the worst patients.

Doctors and medical students alike act as demi-gods.. even tricking our body into thinking we are alright when we are actually not. Taking matters into our own hands.. Because our patients are our priority, first and foremost. So we tend to sacrifice our own health in the name of service. But at whose expense?

Yesterday, as I was having my dinner my roommate texted me, “have you heard? Ads was intubated this evening. GCS 3. sa 7th floor of PGH, fever lang ang presentation! working diagnosis is complicated typhoid fever,but they’re looking into a Hema-onco component daw kc ang bilis. All services on board.  Nagc-code siya ngayon. They’re trying to revive her right now.

And my mind went blank. “Ads whom I was just talking to a few days ago GCS 3!?" Glasgow coma scale 3 means no verbal and motor output, nonreactive pupils. "Could this be somebody’s idea of a cruel joke? Parang text hoax?” It felt surreal. So I asked Eileen where she got that information.  It was from a classmate who was on duty in the Medical Intensive Care Unit at that time. Then the messages started pouring in.

Sabi ko "Baka infectious? Kc ang bilis naman." After four days of confinement and her symptoms progressed and took a turn for the worst. Multiple system organ failure. Speculations started flying everywhere. She had SLE daw. Baka dengue hemorrhagic fever coz of hematochezia. Baka meningococcemia because of the recent admission of a patient in the Pedia ER who was later transferred to San Lazaro Hospital. Everybody was left in the dark. No one had the answers!

And then the same message was circulated. At around 1 am of August 21, Ads passed away. There will be a mass at 10 am in the PGH chapel after which she will be brought home to Baguio.

The PGH director, Dr. Carmelo Alfiler, issued a statement which was circulated via text message which read, “ Nina Berba’s and my conclusions: 1) complicated clinical typhoid 2) not meningo bcoz symptoms anteceded suspect case aug 8 to w/c group apparently exposed 3) obgyn resident dormmate now confined has dengue. Intern’s grp will be monitored by Nina. Please pass.”

I couldn’t sleep. This morning I passed by the PGH chapel around 7:30 am but she wasn’t there yet. I saw some classmates who were her batchmates from Intarmed and they too were just relying on text messages. Nobody knew what really happened. They said she coded 7 times. That she was about to have hemodialysis done in the 6th floor and coded again. That TCVS would have placed an internal jugular vein catheter if she hadn't coded.  I couldn’t imagine the hardship Ads have gone through.

Sadness and disbelief was palpable during the mass in the PGH chapel. The mood was somber. The trickle of rain resonated with the quiet flow of tears. Consultants, residents, and co-interns alike gathered to mourn the sudden loss of one of their own and also to celebrate the life of a colleague. A 23 year old intern, 4 months into her internship in PGH.

As health workers, we are constantly exposed to infectious diseases in the hospital; There are many occupational hazards we have learned to live with because of our desire to treat the patients, to learn in the process. I talked to Dr. Berba, head of the Infectious Diseases Committee (PGH) and Ads' attending physician in a meeting set-up for the interns' block representatives by the PGH director and internship committee after the mass.  I asked Dr. Berba directly because of all the speculations and the sudden turn of events which left all of us in shock.  She said they had done all the laboratory tests possible to exhaust the possible diagnosis, a 2 week history of fever of unknown origin. CBC, blood cultures were negative, PT/PTT, ESR and CRP to document acute and chronic infection, ANA to rule out a possible immunologic process, CEA for possible malignancy even a bone marrow aspirate for blood dyscracias was scheduled for monday.  Ads was placed immediately on broad spectrum antibiotics and was only on day 2-3 of antibiotics.  Ads was even able to text back one of my blockmates and talk to some friends that morning.   But what was to transpire in the next 5 hours of Sunday evening was the worst thing anyone could imagine.

We were reminded of our own mortality. It was a cruel wake-up call. That God can take us at anytime He chooses. We take the little things for granted; a smile, a wave hello, a short and simple conversation, even everyday lunch meals together. We are all travelers on a journey in this world, like pilgrims trying to find their place... We're all on borrowed time because death comes like a thief in the night, when you least expect it. We may not have all the answers we need right now because only God knows why. However, it is in my sincerest prayer that all of us be able to move past this sudden loss.

As we saw Ads in a shiny white and gold coffin, resting peacefully, more tears were shed for our dear batchmate as the Med Choir sang in the background. She was wearing our white UP Med School uniform, with the red nameplate on the left breast pocket. A reminder of her dedication to the profession all of us have chosen. 

“I will remember you

will you remember me?

don't let your life pass you by

weep not for the memories” – Sarah Mclachlan

Last Duty Syndrome Part 1

LAST DUTY SYNDROME... def: a)toxicity x 3 during last duty b)no sleep on shifting out day c)toxic Sunday duty

I have recently coined the term because of my experience in my Surgery rotation. Be it the ward, the ER, and the Operating Room. I usually have an uneventful duty, however with the recent events I have been forced to think that maybe, my last duty is bound to be a toxic one. parang binabawian ako sa benign-an ko. In non-med lingo, toxic roughly refers to something that is difficult, time consuming, or anything that is out of the ordinary hellish.

Take for example my duty in the Surgery ward on June 11. Being the intern on duty, we monitor 2 wards for Surgery, wards 2 and 4. The Surgery ward 2 and Medicine Ward 1 are recently being renovated so the old ward 12 (of Ophthalmology) has been converted into 2 half-wards to accomodate the patients.

Usually the patients in ward 12 were usually stable during our 2 week ward duty and we only monitored 13 patients for both wards that day. But on my last duty, (which coincidentally fell on a Sunday) as I entered ward 12 I saw the ECG guy leaving Bed 20, a middle-aged female who had breast cancer. So I thought, standard procedure before a scheduled operation. No biggie. As I finished monitoring the rest of the ward, I saw a group of people crowding around that bed.  Apparently, they had just called a code and the patient expired before I entered the ward. And this happened at around 2 pm, a time when most of the patients would be having their siesta. And in the interns' callroom, the other surgery interns would just be sleeping too.

6 pm.. PACU (Post-Anesthesia Care Unit) The surgery intern on duty is tasked to monitor the post-op patients every 15 minutes for the 1st hour and every hour thereafter.  You are also tasked to get blood extractions and other procedures.  My co-intern endorsed several blood extractions that he couldn't perform on an intubated combative neurosurgery patient. The patient was a 34 year old guy, intoxicated while driving his motorcycle and met a road accident, fell off his bike and hit his head on the pavement. the usual story for PGH ER patients.

As I was getting his ABG, he flailed wildly even when he was tied to the bed and his bantay held his hand. Horror of all horrors, the 1 cc syringe filled with the patient's blood, flew mid-air and hit my index finger near the nail with no/minimal bleeding.  Paranoid ako sa needlestick injury, my very first! I searched for his chart, looking for a history of Hepatitis B. What if may HepatitisB/Hepatitis C/HIV+ sya? Oh no!!! I got the patient's name and had to report it the Infectious Disease Section so we could run my blood and check for antibodies and test the patient's blood. but the next day was June 12, so the office was going to be closed. malas nga naman! shet last duty syndrome na naman ako. For several days after that, I couldn't think of anything else except my needlestick injury.

9 hours later, I was called to assist in the operating room for a triple A. What's an AAA or an aortic abdominal aneurysm? Basically, an aneursym is when a blood vessel becomes abnormally large or balloons outward. The abdominal aorta is a large blood vessel that supplies blood to your abdomen, the pelvis, and legs so when your aneurysm is at risk for rupture, it is definitely an emergency. I thought, isa siyang madugong operation! Get ready for the sight of gushing blood.

I was sleepy pa because it was 3 in the morning, and as I entered the OR, I saw a thin man, with white hair on the operating table. He was 84 years old, making the procedure more risky. He came in tachycardic at 120s (a fast heart rate). Even before the anesthesiologist could induce the patient, suddenly his blood pressure monitor dropped and went blank, his heart rate dropping in the low 50s. They palpated the arm for his pulse and couldn't feel any. I instinctively reached for the patient's neck and couldn't feel any pulse. Another code. Last Duty Syndrome. The anes resident handed me his stethoscope, "Doktora pakinggan mo." while the other one called the service senior. The junior anesthesiology resident said, "ito kasing intern natin last duty na daw niya ngayon!" He had to blame me, even in a joking manner. We ended up trying to revive the patient on the operating table for nearly an hour. The epinephrine was the only thing that's keeping his heart rate up.  Of course, if the surgeons proceeded with the operation, the patient will die on the operating table. After 5 epinephrine vials, the thoracocardiovascular surgeons talked to the relatives and they decided, to keep him on supportive care in the ward, if only to make the patient's condition a bit better until the eventuality of death.

I went down the OR at 5:30 am, feeling a bit defeated. tired.. 2 codes, 1 needlestick injury after.. In 1.5 hours, I'll be starting my 2 week trauma rotation, a Monday... the start of my new week. I have to change my mindset.