Students on the ward
sometimes I find myself at a loss with a keen med student. I don't want to ignore them, but I don't always (or often!) have a structured tutorial to pull out of the hat
this often varies by specialty and ward anyway
EDIT 29/07/2023: to add stuff
Suggested
at the bedside:
- examine a friendly patient
- pt with a rare condition? tell me what you can about it – better, what can the patient teach you about it?
- when asked to review a patient, do an A-E together, or get them to lead the A-E examination
- observe a blood transfusion
- do a MOCA/ACE etc. (other patient questionnaires exist) talk about the advantages and limitations of those tools.
procedures:
- take a postural BP then talk about risk factors for postural hypotension
- take and interpret an ABG
- any other procedure in the GMC core procedures is game obviously
- troubleshoot a catheter/NG tube/cannula
prescribing:
- mock prescribing – antibiotics, gentamicin (grrr)
- let's talk pain relief...
- let's talk antiemetics and their mechanisms...
- let's talk parkinson's meds...
- take a medication history
- do an admission meds reconciliation
- do a meds reconciliation for discharge – why were meds stopped?
teamwork:
- ask a friendly AHP if the student can shadow them – e.g. specialist nurses, therapists, pharmacists
- follow a patient down to scan
- ask a friendly specialist if the student can shadow them
- write a referral together
- calling micro for a specific question
- take a handover
doctoring:
- write a scan request together → discuss why this modality
- chat about on calls
- do they know how “the take” works?
- doing a DNACPR? write the “red form” together
investigations:
- describe an ECG/scan systematically
- look at some bloods, ask them to tell you what it means
- parse reports, historical or otherwise (I was asked to look through 6 years of clinic letters once...)