- Joined
- Oct 24, 2012
- Messages
- 12,674
It was nice to see my husband. He finally got in from New York late last night because of the snowstorm. I was happy.
I can easily see why all the changes in your life put you there. I don’t have children. Just pets. But my friend who is also Cardiac, her whole outlook changed with her first baby as well.
I asked for a week in April. They have not approved it. I wrote it on the calendar… but haven’t had the nerve to actually ask for the days off.
Thank you. It’s just the headache that is bad. And I’m also having a bit of “word finding/ searching” I get just the slightest confused over which words to describe what I want to say. But it will get better in days to come.
When I first finished fellowship, I got a job in Montreal Quebec. My dream job. Covid hit and my hospital in Montreal became a designated Covid center. They shut down all cardiac surgery. I waited for 1 year, probably operating… 1 case a month, before I gave up. As of this writing, cardiac surgery is still cancelled in my hospital.
So I left to take this job in US before I lost all my technical skills. I took this job without visiting, having never been to the state or the city.
We were supposed to be 3 surgeons. They had a senior surgeon here, and had hired a new female partner (she’s about 60 years old) at same time as me.
I’ve been here 5 months. The senior partner just announced his retirement 4 weeks ago (February 25 is his last day). And they FIRED the female out of nowhere. I thought they would restrict her privileges, remedial work. But literally 1 week ago, on Friday at 4:45 pm they called me and said “can you take Dr. X call this weekend?” And then 5 minutes later she was being escorted out of the building.
The senior partner (understandably) is disconnected and refusing all call until his last da. So I’m alone and it’s overwhelming. They ask me what I need to keep this program going…. They ask me to organize the entire program…. Organize the relationship with the SICU (previously contentious) organize the VA ECMO program. That is a job for a senior surgeon who has the experience to be a leader. I graduated yesterday and I’m trying to survive in a new system… operating for the first time as an attending.
And the hospital is freaking out because it is a level 1 Trauma center. One of the criteria for that designation is a cardiac surgeon on call. Aka: me. This hospital is also the Quaternary referral system for all cardiac surgery of a very large hospital system in the state. I know what you are thinking “and all they have is a new grad”
The endless years of super fellowship (6 more then an ordinary American grad) made me an excellent technical surgeon. I can do things that the senior surgeon who by all accounts was exceptional could NOT do. I did a procedure my second week here that had never been done in this hospital system, and is usually referred to 1 specific center in US. And the administration heard about it quickly and knew they could bank on me.
The problem is: I get very scared not having back up. I need to have someone to ask questions. I have a lot of self doubt, and my confidence can be shaky. I can get anxious in the OR, and the only thing that helps is… “I can always call Dr Z for help” I usually figure it out. But knowing that he’s somewhere in the city, calms me down. Sometimes standing there in front of the patient, the weight of responsibility is crushing. And cardiac surgeons that are left alone often go crazy. Meaning they lose perspective and clinical judgement because there’s no one to hold them accountable. Currently I have 3 virtual cardiac surgeons that I bounce thoughts, review cases with. But it’s not the same as being there. Sometimes… you just need a colleague to peak into OR.
The surgeons here have been incredibly nice rallying around me to try and get me through this and to stay. Vascular, trauma and general surgeons have all met with me individually to offer a hand or a shoulder.
There’s a kindness here that I have not had anywhere else. And this community needs the level 1 trauma. And it needs a good destination for catastrophic cases.
For example, that patient that I rushed to ER for, he was at another center. There was a cardiac surgeon there, much older and experienced then me. He declined the case, said he wasn’t comfortable. They called a larger center with 5 cardiac surgeons. They declined as well. Said it was too complex. I was their 3rd choice. I didn’t decline because I’m an aortic surgeon and while it’s a a high risk case, I did many on fellowship in Texas. So I stood the good chance at it and willing to give it a go. But the problem is the patient was stranded in the ER for 2.5 hours while they tried to find a hospital to accept. And while I did not succeed in saving this patient… that ER physician at referring hospital now knows that this hospital will take and manage these cases… and maybe next time I won’t be third choice and the patient will get here on time.
So I don’t feel like I can just leave. At least not until they find someone to take over. It would be wrong.
I'm not in the medical profession, and I bow my head to those of you who are. Just based on your story, you are an awesome, caring, brilliant, dedicated doctor. You have been doing and are still doing everything you can. And you are Human. You will have insecurities and fears, and especially now in the midst of Covid, and the demands that PEOPLE have placed on doctors, nurses, and all the people in the health care profession are so beyond what people in general can comprehend. I thank you from the bottom of my heart on just being there. I know you want to give up. I would. And the fact that you want to, but you are still there, I start choking up when I think how you must feel. But like you explained, you are all they have. Please do everything you can to care for yourself. As @yssie said, you cannot care for others if there is nothing left of yourself. You are going through so much right now. Can you have a therapist on call, a care giver that can spend time with you? Can you get a driver on call? Can you get people to come to your house, clean it, bring food, do whatever can be done for you so you don't need to stress about those things. You need care. Other people can't do the doctor part. But they can do everything else. I'm just trying to come up with ideas. You want to stay, but you're burnt out, tired, lacking resources and support. As soon as your DH gets home, can he just stay and care for you for an extended period? You poor girl. My heart breaks for you.