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July 31, 2003

Cheap (and better) baby sheets

My cousin Juliet posted a message on our family website that I think merits more global exposure.  Topic:  how expensive sheets are for the baby's bed.

"Baby sheets: I took a nice soft adult flat sheet bought on sale at Macy's or something (if you don't care about the color you can get something really luxurious and soft), cut it into more than four baby-sized pieces and finished the edges. Because you need tiny sheets when they're newborns (and not in the cot yet) and then slightly larger sheets when they're in the cot, and then larger sheets when they are a bit older, one large king-sized sheet will do the whole business. Just cut in half (don't rip!! this was my mistake), then in half again, and cut one of the halves in half, and you've got two tinies, and one or two medium, and one or two large (depending on how many cuts). Move aside Martha Stewart! "

Weblog Rounds

Carl Gandola's bedside.org is active again .. so I guess he's been on service this month.  Too bad we can't get his colleagues (or his residents) to keep the fire burning when he's not on service!

"By osmosis and by repetition over this month we have all learned to communicate better about patients, to listen to their concerns (and think about sitting down in a chair at their bedside). We have developed management plans to improve individuals' health and relieve their pain. We have all worked hard, grown tired at times, learned, and been part of a team giving good care."

It's the beginning of the year for our 4th year medical students, and I am reminded again about the defferences between how we train physicians in residency  They struggle with career choices, and I struggle with how best to guide them.  Innately, Carl guides his learners to listen to their patients -- and to literally get down on their level by taking a seat at the bedside rather than maintain the physical dominance of standing above them.  If you were a patient in a hospital bed, would you prefer ...

 standing:

  or sitting?    

Which patient feels more empowered and involved in their care?

... and it's interesting to me that an educator in family medicine involves this in both his education, and in his discussions of education as an important part of healthcare ... while educators in other specialties just don't address these issues so routienly.   While our residents often refer to Behavioral Science sessions as "BS" ... this remains a required component in the training of family physicians (and no other specialty aside from psychiatry, of course), and an important differentiator in how physicians are trained.    There is also evidence  to support the hypothesis that this difference in training also may have impact on the healthcare that these physicians provide.

Gross Anatomy

Gross Anatomy is another weblog added to medlogs.com today .. and Mr Hassle's RSS feed is working, so she's there too now.

I enjoy the new medbloggers ... especially the medical students and residents.  It's great to see/hear their development as physicians. 

We've got an internal weblogging experiment going on here at Albany Medical College.  We've got beginning 2nd year medical students placed around the country in culturally diverse clinical settings, and they are all using a weblog to communicate their experiences with each other.  For the privacy of the patients, the physicians (even if no PHI is revealed) and the authors, it's all in a password - protected directory.  So you can't see it.    But it's top-notch stuff -- and I think that it's been a great demonstration that this sort of technology can be quite useful.     Are other educational institutions using weblogs in this way? 

 

The Physician's Guide to Assessing and Counseling Older Drivers

The AMA has released The Physician's Guide to Assessing and Counseling Older Drivers.  I'll admit that I have not read the whole 200 page document.  But it looks like a useful resource, with some screening tools and educational worksheets for both physicians and patients.

The AMA's web designers have a thing or two to learn about web user -interface though ... when you click on the link above .. you get to the page that promotes the resource.  It's a press release.  The user is then told to "Click here to view"  .. which leads to another page describing the resource ... along with links to 18 separate PDF files .. which one must click (18 times) to view the document.    What were they thinking?  If we wanted to read it on the web -- we sure didn't want to see it in PDF .. (recall that PDF is for printing - not for online reading) .. but if we want to print it ... uh .. we sure don't want to download 18 separate PDFs to print! ... well .. as a service to docnotes readers .. here's a link to the whole thing -- in printable form -- a bit smaller than PDF -- using Macromedia FlashPaper as a delivery mechanism.  Still not fit for web viewing, but at least you don't have to download 18 documents if you want it printed. 

New Menomune VIS

E-mail from our medical director today:

There is a new VIS (as of 7/28/2003) for the Meningococcal (Menomune) vaccine. The new form should be downloaded as a PDF and printed from immunize.org until you get printed copies.

Federal Law requires that we use the LATEST version of the VIS. (The outdated VIS is dated 3/21/2000.)

On a related note, there is a good article in Pediatrics on Immunization of Preterm and Low Birth Weight Infants (pdf) (HTML).