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Signouts

HouseStaff Handbook Inpatient Service

Signouts occur at 7am and 7pm promptly on a daily basis. Do NOT be late. CORES on the EMR should be updated daily.  As an intern, you are responsible for your patient’s sign out and you are to be present during all of sign out to listen in case of ...

inpatient

Call Days

HouseStaff Handbook Inpatient Service

CALL days are designated as Monday’s and Fridays. Usually interns will do 24 hour shift on these days. Please refer to AMION for schedule.  These are days when the most admissions will occur, you are to see them in a timely fashion while still rounding on alr...

Admission Orders

HouseStaff Handbook Inpatient Service

 Place admit order within 1 hour  Go see the patient  Do Medical reconciliation  Place appropriate general orders  Present and see the patient with your attending  Modify orders as appropriate  Repeat for next admit and curse the heavens that it arrived ...

Procedure Notes

HouseStaff Handbook Inpatient Service

 Perform the procedure  Find the appropriate procedure note in the EMR  Complete the procedure note  Sign and send the note to the attending you did the procedure with

Death and Documentation

HouseStaff Handbook Inpatient Service

When called for a patient’s death, ascertain that the patient is unresponsive to verbal and tactile stimuli without spontaneous respirations (visually and by auscultation), is pulseless and without heart sounds, and that pupillary reactivity is absent. Further...

Bradycardia

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Evaluation Check if the patient is stable or unstable Get a complete set of vital signs and EKG If concerned, have pacer pads and atropine at the bedside (if unstable, see ACLS bradycardia) Determine whether this is sinus bradycardia based on EKG Take his...

Tachycardia

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Narrow complex tachycardia Evaluation Obtain EKG and complete set of vital sign to check for hemodynamic instability If unstable follow ACLS protocol Management Unstable: follow ACLS protocol and do not delay synchronized cardioversion  Try vagal maneuve...

Hypotension

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Evaluation Decreased SVR: Exam = warm extremities, sometimes flushing Sepsis: common cause. Obtain blood culture x2, CXR, UA/micro/culture, and lactate. Rapid administration of IVF and antibiotic Medications: Look for antiHTN, pain meds, sedative, if concer...

Hypertension

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Evaluation Physical examination Brain: headache, confusion, lethargy, stroke Eye: blurred vision Heart: Chest pain, dyspnea Kidney: low urine output, edema Lab: not always required. Use selectively to determine cause and whether patient meets criteria fo...

Fever

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Differential - Infection (lung, heart, brain, urine, sinuses, prostate, abdomen, skin, joints, lines, etc) - Infammation (Collagen vascular disorder, neoplastic disorder) - Mucositis- Atelectasis- Blood product reaction- Drug fever (beta lactam antibiotics an...

Low urine output

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Normal urine output - typically at least 0.5 cc/kg/hr. - Oliguria: urine output < 400cc/day- Anuria : urine output < 100cc/day  Do you believe the numbers?  - If patient has foley, flush tubing to make sure it is not clogged. - If no foley, ask about urine ...

Dyspnea

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

DDx (5 major categories of disease to consider) Pulmonary Pneumonia = fever, purulent vs dry cough, pleuritic chest pain Pneumothorax = acute onset, pleuritic chest pain. Consider in any intubated patient. Pulmonary embolism = Hx DVT, recent surgery, pleur...

Chest pain

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

I. DDx (Biggest killers) MI : Dull pressure pain associated with dyspnea, diaphoresis, radiation to left jaw/arm, N/V, cardiac risk factors present Aortic Dissection: Tearing pain that radiates straight to the back, associated with HTN, smoking Hx, unequal ...

Combative or Confused patients

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Does the patient have altered mental status or is he/she upset over something? If there is any question of physical injury, call security (0). No matter how many years of commando training you have, it is not your responsibility to restrain patients in a sa...

Falls

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Evaluation/Management Assess patients at bedside. Look for any injury; any locality on exam must be worked up in the appropriate manner (e.g. head CT, plain films, immobilization, etc). In particular, look for: ecchymosis, abrasions, fractures, pain, asymmetr...

Insomnia

HouseStaff Handbook Common Calls From The Floor

Trial non pharmacological measures first: sleep hygiene, noise reduction (ear plugs/muffs), reduce lighting, avoid night time interruptions if able, turn off TV/radio/etc. In room Before using pharmacotherapy, check patient allergies Melatonin is generally a...

Hyponatremia

HouseStaff Handbook Acid/Base And Electrolytes

Definition Mild: Serum Na 130-134mmol/L Moderate: Serum Na 120-129mmol/L Severe: Serum Na <120mmol/L Acute: <48hrs since development of hyponatremia Chronic: >48hrs since development of hyponatremia. (hyponatremia should be considered chronic whenever the...

Hypernatremia

HouseStaff Handbook Acid/Base And Electrolytes

Definition: Serum Na >135 mmol/L. Chronic means > 48 hours. Acute means < 48hrs. Etiology:  Renal water loss (U osm <700-800) loop diuretics Osmotic diuresis (hyperglycemia, mannitol, urea) Diabetes Insipidus: Central (trauma/post-surgical, pituitary le...

Hypokalemia

HouseStaff Handbook Acid/Base And Electrolytes

Definition: Serum <3.5mmol/L Etiology:  Intracellular shifts: Hypothermia, Exogenous insulin/refeeding, beta-agonists GI Potassium loss Metabolic acidosis: diarrhea, laxative abuse Metabolic alkalosis: Vomiting, NGT Renal Potassium Losses Hypotensive...

Hyperkalemia

HouseStaff Handbook Acid/Base And Electrolytes

Definition Serum K+ >5.3-5.5 Etiology: Pseudohyperkalemia- K release from cells after blood draw, IVF with K Impaired excretion Low GFR (AKI or CKD) Drugs (spironolactone, ACEi, ARB, TMP-SMX, NSAIDs, digitalis overdose, heparin, chemo therapeutic agents)...