Melbourne MICA
Forum Captain
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Getting your hnads dirty
Well said venny.
We had an observer on our MICA truck last week - a hospital trauma director from Kuala Lumpar, Malaysia no less. She had some very interesting perpsectives on her own doctors who worked in trauma telling us that more often than not their first port of call when assessing a patient was some piece of technology which more often than not didn't provide the answers they were seeking in the first place. Instead she told them, apply your clinical skills first and use the technologies as an adjunct to them. Their approach was arse about, she told us (not in those terms of course).
The salient piece of information was this mindset was most prevalent in the younger doctors who have grown with mobile phones, IPODS and computers.
She and her colleagues have now commenced a back to basics programme to install confidence in clinical skills and assessment methods. One of the main reasons for this was their approach was costing the hospital a small fortune.
All sounds mighty familiar doesn't it.
We must all be mindful of treating techno solutions to clinical problems with some skepticism and caution. Many are extremely useful to be sure. EZIO is very good at what it does for example. However at the end of the day there are plenty of circumstances where such tools won't be an option and you will need to fall back on using your senses, your intuition, your experience and your skills.
MM
"If you build a machine even an idiot can use, only an idiot will use it."
The idea that technology can be employed to make up for a substandard provider is alive and well. Look at many of the new ET gadgets. Every form of TV and fiber optic because people can't figure out how to put a tube in the correct hole.
Too bad reproduction wasn't that hard. The world would probably be a better place.
EZ IO if you are too inept to start an IV.
How did we ever start IVs on hard sticks before? Oh yea, we practiced! Not to boast but I know providers who can start an IV on a patient who is a IV drug abusing, on chemo/radiation therapy, diabetic, dialysis patient who coded 10 minutes ago in under 90 seconds during a hurricane.
Can't stop bleeding?
There's an app for that
Why don't the marketing people just say it like it is:
"Since you absoultely suck at patient care and medicine, buy our product in order to fake it untill you can transfer care to somebody better."
Well said venny.
We had an observer on our MICA truck last week - a hospital trauma director from Kuala Lumpar, Malaysia no less. She had some very interesting perpsectives on her own doctors who worked in trauma telling us that more often than not their first port of call when assessing a patient was some piece of technology which more often than not didn't provide the answers they were seeking in the first place. Instead she told them, apply your clinical skills first and use the technologies as an adjunct to them. Their approach was arse about, she told us (not in those terms of course).
The salient piece of information was this mindset was most prevalent in the younger doctors who have grown with mobile phones, IPODS and computers.
She and her colleagues have now commenced a back to basics programme to install confidence in clinical skills and assessment methods. One of the main reasons for this was their approach was costing the hospital a small fortune.
All sounds mighty familiar doesn't it.
We must all be mindful of treating techno solutions to clinical problems with some skepticism and caution. Many are extremely useful to be sure. EZIO is very good at what it does for example. However at the end of the day there are plenty of circumstances where such tools won't be an option and you will need to fall back on using your senses, your intuition, your experience and your skills.
MM