The Intern Blues

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by Robert Marion


  I’m also getting a little worried about July. In July I’m going to be magically transformed into a junior resident. I like the idea of not being an intern anymore, but I’m not so sure I like the idea of being a resident. I mean, residents are people the interns turn to when they have questions and concerns. Residents are figures of authority. For some reason, I can’t seem to imagine myself as an authority figure. I can’t imagine giving interns advice. I wouldn’t trust advice I gave to myself. Of course, that sounds kind of ridiculous.

  Bob

  APRIL 1986

  During the course of training, each doctor develops his or her own individual style of dealing with the family of a patient who has died. The evolution of this style occurs mostly through trial and error; with enough experience and having made enough mistakes, you gradually develop a method that makes both you and the family comfortable. There’s no way this can be taught in a classroom or through reading books or articles.

  Some doctors find that they feel most comfortable sitting down and having an open and frank discussion with the family, explaining to them in an honest and supportive way the events that led up to the death of the patient. This method is used most often by physicians who have had a lot of experience and who have a great deal of confidence in their skills. Young house officers have difficulty being very frank when discussing the death of a child with parents. Often there are many questions in the minds of the intern and resident about what actually led to the patient’s death; they worry that they might have missed something important that could have saved the child’s life, or that some task for which they were responsible was overlooked and contributed in some way to the patient’s death. So interns usually don’t feel comfortable having long discussions with the parents of a child who has died.

  Some doctors overstep the traditional role of the physician and cry along with the parents of a child who has just died. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing; the parents often appreciate the fact that their grief is shared by others who knew and cared a great deal for their child.

  This style certainly described me as a house officer. While on the oncology ward in May of my internship, I cared for a twelve-year-old boy with leukemia. Tom’s disease had been diagnosed the previous September, and coincidentally I had cared for him during that admission as well. Now we were both back on the ward, and on the first morning of the month, Tom was once again assigned to me.

  It was a shock to see him after all that time. Back in September, he had been a strapping, healthy-looking young adolescent; by May he had been reduced to a wasted, comatose vegetable, unable to speak or eat or react to any outside stimulus. His mother, with whom I had become friendly during his first admission, stayed with the boy constantly during the time he spent in the hospital, guarding over him for what proved to be the remainder of his life.

  I was on call the night Tom finally died. His vital signs had become very irregular during the evening; his nurse had called to tell me this news, and I had left what I was doing to come. We stood silently over him, his mother at the foot of the bed, the nurse to the left, and me on Tom’s right, and we waited for his breathing to stop. That finally happened about an hour and a half after I had first entered the room. I was the one to declare him dead.

  I had spent all that time in Tom’s room not because I was his doctor; there was nothing I had learned in medical school or during my internship that could in any way have altered the course of events. I knew that, and Tom’s mother knew that. I had stayed in his room because I was a friend; I had known him and his mother for nine of the most difficult months of their lives, and I was with them at the end out of respect for that friendship. I think my being there meant something to Tom’s mother; I know it meant an awful lot to me.

  But some doctors find that they can’t deal with death at all. They equate death with failure, and they have trouble dealing with and accepting their own failures, and they have trouble dealing with and accepting their own failures. Once the patient dies, these physicians simply wash their hands of the whole affair. They leave the counseling of the family, the “mopping up after,” to others.

  In the case of Andy Baron’s little patient, it seems as if the child’s attending fell into the latter of these three groups. Unfortunately, the job of talking to the parents fell to Andy and the other house officers who happened to be around. At this stage in his training, Andy is looking to people such as that attending to guide him through this process. I’m almost positive Andy did a good job with these parents; I know him well enough at this stage to understand how sensitive and sympathetic he can be. But still, the attending’s absence at this critical time must have been very difficult for the house staff as well as for the parents, who were looking for answers that couldn’t possibly have been given by anyone other than the attending.

  I know it must have been difficult for the parents, because I’ve been on their side of the fence. Last year, my wife delivered a stillborn baby. Beth had started having what she thought were labor pains one evening about two weeks before her due date. We had gone to the hospital with all our stuff, figuring our baby was about to be born. When we got to the labor floor at University Hospital, a nurse listened to Beth’s abdomen with a fetoscope, a special stethoscope designed to amplify the fetal heartbeat. She couldn’t hear a thing. Without a word to either of us, she left the room, and about five minutes later, a resident appeared at the door, pushing an ultrasound machine in front of her. She introduced herself and told us that she was going to do a sonogram. And without saying anything else, she went about her work.

  I’ve watched over five hundred fetal sonograms. I have a pretty good idea of what’s occurring on the ultrasound machine’s screen. And while watching the scan that the resident did, I could make out our daughter’s head and her chest, her abdomen and her limbs, but I could not see her heart beating. After a few minutes of searching, the resident picked up the ultrasound machine’s transducer, turned off the power, and said she’d be back in a few minutes.

  “I didn’t see the fetal heartbeat,” I said.

  “I didn’t either,” she said quietly, startled at my statement. “I’m going to call your attending.”

  Beth and I sat in the room crying; no one came to explain what was going on or what would happen next. Finally, after about a half hour, Beth’s doctor appeared at the door. He told us that it seemed as if the baby had died. He talked with us, answered our questions, and told us what the most appropriate management plan was. Since the labor pains that had begun this whole episode a few hours before had completely ceased, Beth agreed to wait until natural labor resumed, an occurrence her doctor assured her would take place within the next week or so. And so, devastated, we prepared to go home.

  After leaving the labor room, we approached the nurses’ station. The nurses and the resident who had done the ultrasound were having an animated conversation, laughing and apparently enjoying themselves, but as we approached, they became silent. I was used to this; I had been part of this kind of behavior, especially during my time in the neonatal ICU. But now I was experiencing it in a different way; Beth and I were the opposition now, and this behavior made our grief just a little bit worse.

  I’ve learned something from this experience, and accordingly I’ve altered the method I use when talking with the families of children who have died. This isn’t an experience I would recommend, but it did help me understand a little more about what goes through the mind of a parent whose child has died.

  Andy

  MAY 1986

  Wednesday, May 7, 1986, 7:00 P.M.

  I finally finished Infants’. It was a horrible, depressing month. About a week after the baby with heart disease died, I had another patient who got very sick and had to go up to ICU. I intubated him myself. He deteriorated so fast, he almost died on the ward before we could get him up to the unit.

  Now I’m in the OPD, and all the details are starting to blur. I suppose if I spoke into this thing religiously every
day, I could tell you endless story after story about all the kids and their various problems. But what does it matter? It’s all just a horrible blur, one after the next, made up of all these poor, sick kids.

  Thursday, May 8, 1986, 10:00 P.M.

  It’s become really hard to continue keeping this diary. Over the past few months I’ve lost touch with my inner self; I’m not sure completely why that’s happening, but I think it’s because I’m defending myself against all the bad feelings I’ve had about being an intern. It relates to a lot of different issues having to do with the general feeling of being abused and mistreated, and the fatigue and the sleep deprivation, and the death and the morbidity of my patients. So certainly that’s one reason I haven’t been talking. I’m out of touch with myself, and it’s hard to know what exactly to talk about. The other thing is, the thrill and excitement and novelty are gone, and they’ve been replaced by a more realistic perception of what I think medicine is. And for some reason, there’s something in me that doesn’t want to relate all those stories about all the various patients. Talking about it makes me feel like I’m back at work, and I hate even to think about being at work.

  Saturday, May 10, 1986, 4:10 A.M.

  I just spent the last six hours in the Jonas Bronck ER working on a fucking child-abuse case. I really hate them; I hate them more than anything else in this job. I think I’ve seen enough child abuse for an entire lifetime. I don’t want to see any more, thank you. They never go well, they’re always difficult.

  This one, I just pulled the chart from the box, I didn’t even read the triage note, and I called the kid in. She had a bandage on her forehead. Oh, great, I thought. A laceration. I asked what happened and the mother gave me this story that the girl was lying on the floor and playing and she bumped her head and cut herself on the hinge of her glasses or something weird like that and cut her forehead. I asked her to go over that again and the mother gave me basically the same story. So I took the glasses off the kid’s face and I tried to find a way to make the hinge hit up against the forehead. I couldn’t do it. The frames were plastic and they were totally intact. I thought, No way! No way the kid could have done this!

  So I decided I’d better do a complete examination. I got her undressed, and lo and behold, she had big contusions across her back and across her upper right thigh. I just thought, Oh, fuck! You get a feeling down in the pit of your stomach when you finally figure out what you’re dealing with, and I got it at that moment.

  Then I examined her vagina, and it looked kind of red and smelled bad, and I thought, Oh fuck! again. To make a long story short, I reported the kid to the BCW and the cops as a suspected physical and sexual abuse case. And I had to fill out only about a thousand forms among the chart, documenting the living shit out of it, the BCW 2221 form, and the rape evidence kit [documents and materials that will be needed when the case goes to court].

  The whole thing was horrible. The parents were crazed; at one point they tried to take the kid out. They started to dress her and said they were going to take her to Washington Hospital [a municipal hospital in the South Bronx]. Give me a break! I called security at that point. Once I called security, that was it, they knew the jig was up. They knew they had been caught. Oh, man! It was horrible. I hate it. After I called security, I was shaking and nervous for a while because it’s such a bad thing to have to deal with. I don’t want to help take kids away from their parents! Kids don’t want to be taken away from their parents; they love them even if they are horrible! So even though the parents have done something terribly wrong, I’m the one who feels like he’s committing the crime.

  Anyway, it takes so long to do everything, God knows what the kid’s disposition will be. I don’t know what to say. I hate it, I hate child abuse so much, I wish it never existed.

  Wednesday, May 21, 1986, 9:30 P.M.

  It’s been a typical wild month in the Jonas Bronck ER. I’m getting out of this month exactly what I wanted: I’m learning how to manage trauma, and I’m learning how to see multiple patients in a short period of time. I’m a lot better at it than I was; I’m still not able to be as accurate as I’d like to be, but I can see some improvement every day. I can be fast when things aren’t too complicated; I still haven’t gotten good at seeing a complicated patient and a couple of uncomplicated patients at the same time. But I have another week in the ER and maybe I can get a handle on that.

  I can’t remember anymore what I’ve talked about and what I haven’t talked about. I don’t know, there are so many stories, so many stories of frightened mothers and frightened children, sick children, and I don’t know why, I just don’t want to talk about any of it anymore. I’ve had some bad nights, I’ve had some good nights. I’m sorry . . . I’m sorry this is deteriorating. But the year’s almost over, it’s just another five weeks or so and I’ll be moving back to Boston. I really need to start making arrangements. I haven’t done that yet. I’ll have to take a day off from work to get that squared away.

  Everybody seems to be calling in sick all the time now. Except me. There’s one intern in particular who’s always calling in sick, or coming late to clinic. I’m thinking that maybe I’ll fucking call in sick one morning and get everything arranged for the move. But I think maybe this is another fantasy of mine. I haven’t missed a day of work yet this year and I probably won’t start changing and calling in sick with so little time left. It pisses me off a lot when other people call in sick. It’s totally irresponsible and everybody always winds up having to work a little harder to make up for the person who calls in sick, and that’s not fair.

  My clinic’s going fine, and I have a couple of specialty clinics including renal, which I think I like a lot. I think I could actually do renal. I’m not sure yet, I’ll have to try it again when I’m in Boston, but there are a lot of good things about it: It’s interesting, it isn’t a lot of hard work, and the people seem nice. I don’t know, it’s something I might be able to be content with for the rest of my life.

  People have been saying a lot of nice things about me over the past few weeks. They tell me how much they’re going to miss me and that I’ve added a lot to the program. A couple of the attendings have said that I’d make a good chief resident. That’s all very nice and very flattering; part of me likes that fantasy of staying here and being asked to be chief, even though I know it’s just a fantasy, and part of me now is very slowly, very slowly recognizing that I’m actually going to be leaving soon. I haven’t started thinking of myself as being a resident in Boston next year; I don’t have an emotional attachment to that program yet. I can see myself as a junior resident here much better than I can see myself as a junior resident there. I really wonder if I’ll be ready for the demands of that place.

  Next week I start my last month on 6A. My last month! My God! You know, this is going to sound tacky and very clichéd, but the year really has gone by fast. Two hundred ripped-off nights!

  The chief residents’ beeper party was today, and I missed it. I’d been looking forward to it for months. I even went out this morning and bought a blueberry pie to bring. Then I got stuck in the ER with a fifteen-year-old who got hit by a car and was dragged twenty yards. He was a mess; he had a basilar skull fracture, a hemotympanum [blood behind his tympanic membrane, a sign of skull fracture], blood in his urine, a laceration over the eye. I was fuckin’ stuck with him and I missed the party but I learned a little about handling multiple trauma. I wanted to go so badly, I really was pissed off. One of the highlights of the year, and I missed it. Too bad. There’ll be new chiefs the day after tomorrow. New chiefs: No more calling Jon, no more calling Claire, no more calling Arlene, no more calling Eric. I wanted to thank them, I wanted to thank them all, and now I don’t know if I’ll get the chance. I’ll miss them, and I’ll remember them. They were really great.

  The tape’s running out. So I’ll stop now. One more month to go. One more month.

  Amy

  MAY 1986

  Sunday, May 11, 1986<
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  Sarah’s been taking a lot more of our time and attention lately. She wants to be read to constantly. She’s always toddling over to Larry or me, holding a book in her hand. She has two favorites: Goodnight Moon and Green Eggs and Ham. She can listen to them over and over again for hours. But they do start to get a little boring after the fifteenth or sixteenth reading.

  It’s getting harder for me to keep up with Sarah because of how tired I’ve been feeling. My nausea’s just about all gone but I’m always so tired, all I want to do when I have a free minute is go to sleep. And Sarah isn’t very happy about that. She doesn’t like to see Mommy in bed. Lord knows, she sees so little of me, at least I ought to be able to play with her when I do manage to get home from work.

  Things have been very stressful and aggravating for me lately. First, it was the month in the NICU. God, that was terrible. I never want to spend another night in there! As far as I’m concerned, neonatology is a complete waste!

  And when I finally finished getting aggravated in the NICU, it was time to start fighting with the chief residents and the rest of the administration about maternity leave. I know this might sound like a very old story, but it looks like they’re trying to screw me again. Last week, they sent out these things called “Schedule Request Forms” for next year. We’re supposed to fill them in and make requests for when we’d like our vacation time. Since I’m already in my third month of pregnancy and some people have already started asking me whether I’m pregnant, I figured it was time to bring the issue up with the chiefs. So last Tuesday I went up to their office and had a little talk with them.

 

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