Transcript Slide 1

PGY2-to-Be Retreat
June 9, 2014
Scott Denstaedt
Marty Tam
Angel Qin
Khanjan Shah
“With great power comes great
responsibility”
-Spiderman
Overview
4-4:30 PM
Snacks and informal discussion
4:30-6 PM
Introductions and classroom activities
Giving feedback
Milestones
Changes in the ambulatory program
Student teaching - clerkship directors
6-7:45 PM
Dinner
How to be a ward resident - small groups
Intern class group meetings
8-9 PM
Administrative issues/changes for next year/chief residents
Ambulatory program
Electives
Jeopardy
Transition dates
Team caps/duty hours
Staffing/new roles
Coverage/schedules
Reading list
Moonlighting
Professionalism/conferences
In-training exam
MICU/CICU schedule
Night float
Two midnight rule
Codes
Changes for Next Year
•Ambulatory Model 2.0
•Electives
•Jeopardy
Ambulatory Model 2.0
• 2013-2014: four ambulatory blocks and 2-4 clinics in elective
• 2014-2015: five ambulatory blocks and no clinic in elective (there is
a panel management day)
• “6+2” model
– 6 weeks of ICU/wards/elective
– 2 weeks of dedicated ambulatory
– 7 half days of clinic each block and 1 administrative half day
• Positive Effect
– Continuity: you and three other seniors make up a team (with two
interns) and see the same patients (great for you and the patients!)
– Electives Preserved: you can make more of your elective now!
– Curriculum: streamlined and less repetitive
• New Challenges
– Ambulatory blocks are fixed (cannot trade)
– Change is uncomfortable, but we do it to try and make things better
Ambulatory Model 2.0
Ambulatory Model 2.0
Team
Flight 1 (1A,4B,8A,10A,12A)
Flight 2 (1B,5A,8B,10B,12B)
Flight 3 (2A,5B,9A,11A,13A)
Flight 4 (2B,6A,9B,11B,13B)
VA 1 Red
Perihan
John S
Anodika
Prashanth
VA 2 Silver
Andres
Rachel
Abdullah Alm
Perica
VA 3 Purple
Alina
Katie
Philicia
Khadejah
VA 4 Yellow
Amhed
Wissam
Nupur
Lesley
DMC 1 M
Bryan
Jacob
Rania
Neetika
DMC 2 Tu
Stephanie K
Sadeer
John G
Nate S
DMC 3 W
Maya
Carine
Patrick
Gabe
DMC 4 Th
Ahmad
Dafina
Atallah
Vincent
DMC 5 F
Stephanie M
Brandon
Yosra
Chris
DMC 6 M
Roopa
Cassie
Won
Dhruti
DMC 7 Tu
Jack
Mo
Abdullah Alj
Hussain
DMC 8 W
Aniket
Anthony
Rishi
Shiv
DMC 9 Th
Bouchra
Priyam
Ning
Ziyad
Ambulatory Model 2.0
# Residents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
BOX
BOX
Admin
# Residents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
BOX
BOX
Admin
Mon
Team 1
Tues
Wed
Team 1
Thurs
# Residents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Fri
Team 1
Mon
Team 1
Team 3
Team 4
Team 6
Team 7
Team 9
*Intern 1
Tues
Team 2
Team 4
Team 5
Team 7
Team 8
Thurs
Team 2
Team 4
Team 6
Team 7
Team 9
Fri
Team 1
Team 3
Team 5
Team 7
Team 8
*Intern 2
Wed
Team 1
Team 3
Team 5
Team 6
Team 8
Team 9
*Intern 3
*Intern 4
*Intern 5
*Intern 6
*Intern 7
*Intern 8
*Intern 9
Team 2
Intern
Team 8
Mon
Team 1
Team 2
Team 4
Team 6
Team 8
Team 9
*Intern 1
Team 3
Intern
Team 9
Tues
Team 2
Team 3
Team 5
Team 7
Team 9
Team 4
Intern
*Intern 2
*Intern 3
Team 5
Intern
Team 1
Thurs
Team 1
Team 2
Team 4
Team 5
Team 7
Team 9
*Intern 4
*Intern 6
*Intern 7
*Intern 8
*Intern 9
Team 7
Intern
Team 3
Team 8
Intern
Team 4
Team 9
Intern
Team 5
Intern
Team 6
WEEK 1
WEEK 1
8
Mon
Team 1
Tues
Wed
Team 1
Team 1
Thurs
Team 1
Fri
WEEK 2
BOX
BOX
Admin
# Residents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Team 1
BOX
BOX
Admin
Wed
Team 1
Team 3
Team 4
Team 6
Team 8
Team 6
Intern
Team 2
Fri
Team 2
Team 3
Team 5
Team 6
Team 8
*Intern 5
Team 1
Intern
Team 7
WEEK 2
Ambulatory EMR - DMC
• Beginning July 1st, DMC will transition to
ambulatory EMR
• Experts will be available to assist with any dayto-day problems
• You need to complete the EMR training via
Oracle prior to July 1st (alternative was full day
of in-house training!)
Electives
• PGY II: 8 weeks
• PGY III: 12 weeks
• Quality Chief will now be assisting Barb in keeping a running
list of what you are doing for elective
• For ACGME requirements each resident must have a specified
activity and supervisor for each elective
Example Elective Tracking
Electives
• Research Electives:
• Must have a mentor/PI for project
• If doing two weeks (or more) of research elective, you are
required to present a poster at Medicine Research Day
• If you present at a national meeting…travel money!
• Reading Electives:
• Requires approval, KBA is designated supervisor
• Required attendance at all UH noon conferences, UH
M+Ms, UH Grand Rounds, VA Grand Rounds
Elective Reminder
• Elective Professionalism
• Elective is not vacation
• You are back-up jep and expected to be in Cleveland
• If you are going out of town, please let the Ambulatory
chief know
• “Don’t you remember when you were a resident?”
• Having your pager on 24/7 on elective is unreasonable
• Everyone on elective is back-up jep any given day, but we
can assign people on specific days to be the first called so
you know when to have your pager with you
Jeopardy
• Minor changes to the jeopardy system will be made
• Use of jeopardy will be tracked for training/support purposes
– Make sure everyone is meeting minimum requirements
– Make sure we provide help and resources to those that need it
• Those getting jepped from electives will be tracked as well
– Ties into the “first call” back-up jep list, you move down the list after
getting jepped
– Makes the system more fair
• KEY Points
– Jeopardy still remains for emergencies and significant illness
– Unless there is excessive use of jeopardy (decided on a case by case
basis), you are not expected to pay back
– There is still a jep rotation, coverage here is not tracked and you do
not get paid back
Transition Dates
•PGY1 end date: 6/23
•Block Zero: 6/24 – 6/30
•Block One: 7/1 – year of SMAK!
Team Caps
• UH Wards:
• 10 patients per intern
• 8 patients per intern on Ratnoff/Weisman
• Intern+AI: 12 patients if two seniors; 10 patients if one senior
• VA Wards:
• 8 patients per intern
• Intern+AI: 10 patients
• AI+AI pair: 10 patients
• Short Admissions:
• No shorts on weekends
• No shorts if intern has 8 patients
• Shorts for Intern+AI pair to cap of 10 patients
Duty Hours
• Long Call:
– 3 patients (4 if paired with AI) until 7 PM
– 2 patients if after 5 PM
– 1 patient is after 6 PM
• Medium Call:
– 2 patients until 4 PM
– Can sign out at 7 PM
• Short Call:
– 2 patients until 12 PM at UH (NF or ICU transfers)
– 2 patients until 1 PM at VA (NF, ICU transfers, new admissions)
– No short patients on clinic days
ANESTHESIA INTERNS MUST LEAVE BY 9 PM IF ON CALL!!!
• Senior Resident:
– Residents on call MUST stay until 9 PM
– No matter what the call, ward seniors staff any patient the seen before 4
PM
– Weekend coverage seniors must stay and staff at least until 1 PM or longer
depending on how busy the other seniors are
Staffing
• UH wards will have double coverage Blocks 1-4a
• There will be minimal orphan coverage in the first few blocks
• See and examine EVERY patient
• No staffing note required for ICU transfers or interservice
transfers
• Focused notes by the senior resident with detailed plan
• See PGY1 note for full H&P. Briefly, pt is a …
• Helpful to new interns:
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•
•
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Antibiotic doses
Description of imaging - With contrast? Without?
Medications to continue, medications to discontinue
CODE STATUS and Allergies
Staffing
• On call resident should notify the nightfloat resident of
tenuous patients
• Be proactive about staffing patients
Your New Role
Be a Manager:
•Print out daily patient list for attending at UH
•Enter team attendings in the EMR
•Lead rounds
•Review active medications and orders EVERY DAY!
•Direct intern work flow
•Help with discharge summaries!
•Have teaching topics
•Maintain a white board and saved list of patients
•Review discharge profiles
Your New Role
Be a Teacher:
•Great teachers are motivators, respectful, and treat their
students as colleagues/equals
•Take time to critically evaluate presentation skills
•Find your own method of teaching
Your New Role
Be a Steward of Sign-outs:
•What is important? What changes management?
•What is not important?
•Observe signouts early
Coverage and Schedule Switches
• All coverage arrangements and schedule switches
must be approved by the Ambulatory chief so it can
be noted in amion
• Switches must be arranged before 1 week of
rotation starting
Residency Reading List
• Residency Reading list:
• Landmark and review articles in all sub-specialties
• Last major update in 2011
• Looking a 20-40 year old resident who enjoys long nights
of Boolean searching to help update the site with new
landmark trials…
Moonlighting
• FLEX – occasionally, when your team is capped and a patient is in
need of your specific team, they can be admitted by you for
money, usually go to intern the next day as admission
• PRN SHD – admit 3 patients
• Early and Late SHD – admit 3 patients
• Admitting LHD – admit 6 patients from 6 PM – 6 AM
• Cross Cover LHD – cross covers hospitalist, NPs, and can admit 1
patient (3 if overnight NP present), work from 8 PM – 8 AM
• MICU moonlighter – 9 pm – 9 am Fri/Sat. Responsible for
alternating admissions with resident until 2am, then all
admissions
• No moonlighting during wards or ICU
Professionalism
Professionalism: Attire
•Men
• Shirts and ties
•Women
• Professional
•Keep white coats clean
•No denim
•Do not show up to Morning
Report looking sloppy
Professionalism: Absences
• If you have to call in sick > 1 day, you will need a doctor’s
note from the Bolwell Family Practice clinic
• You will be able to get a same-day appointment
• If you are sick for > 2 days and do not have a doctor’s
note, you will be assigned extra weekend coverage
and/or weekend jeopardy
• Call-offs: You must PAGE 31529 the Ambulatory Chief
• DO NOT EMAIL
• DO NOT TEXT PAGE
• DO NOT CALL THE CELL PHONE OF THE CHIEF YOU KNOW
Professionalism: Electives
• Attend all Grand Rounds and M&M’s
• You are back up jeopardy!! = pager on
• If you are going out of town for the weekend, as a
courtesy please notify the ambulatory chief prior to
leaving
• Elective is not vacation
• Please email Barb 2 weeks prior to starting your
electives; Quality chief will be keeping track of electives
• Research for more than 2 weeks = present at Research
Day
Professionalism: Reading Electives
• Residents on reading elective are expected to attend
morning reports and journal clubs at the VA
• Must attend Grand Rounds at UH
• Your pager is expected to be turned on and on you during
the entire two weeks of elective
• All reading electives must be approved by KBA
• For PGY2s it can only be used to study/take step 3
• Please note that when you are on elective, you are back up
jeopardy!!!
Professionalism: Conference
Attendance
• Please be on time; our speakers usually have prepared a well
thought out talk/powerpoint, so please be respectful of the
time they spent
• Noon conference:
• UH: Mon-Wed-Thurs
• VA: Mon-Thurs-Fri
• Grand Rounds on Tuesday: UH & VA
• M&M Fridays @UH, Wednesdays @VA
• Conference attendance is part of your ACGME graduation
requirements
Ambulatory Conference Attendance
• Ambulatory conference attendance is mandatory
• Late Policy will be strictly enforced:
• Sign-in sheet will be available until 8:05AM
• At your 2nd instance of being late = extra weekend coverage
• Any MISSED conferences without prior approval by the ambulatory
chief will result in weekend coverage
Professionalism: Agre Society
• First Wednesday of each month beginning
September
• Organized by Dr. Proweller
• Excellent opportunity to hear the career
trajectories of influential clinicians/
researchers
• May be your solution to “I cannot find a
mentor…”
Professionalism: Discharge
Summaries
•If you put in the discharge order, you do the
discharge summary
•Do them the day of discharge
•Do them for your intern
•Do them for your friends
•Do them for your patients
•Remember it is now easier than ever to do it
in UH EMR
In-service Training Exam
•
In-service Exam Dates are in September – exam is
completely computerized this year
•
•
•
Includes all PGY2/3, PGY1’s?
ITE during 2nd year is an important predictor of passing
boards
ITE remediation by percentile rank
•
•
•
>50% - no remediation, continue to study
31-49% - turn in in 60 multiple choice questions every 4
weeks to assigned APD for review; continue studying and
attend board review sessions
16-30% - high risk for ABIM failure multiple choice questions
as above with directed notes
•
If you are not already doing this PLEASE talk with us or your APD,
ABIM failure is no joke
• 1-16% - more intense remediation, urgent intervention
required (we are here to help!)
CICU Intern
• Two interns scheduled in the CICU
– Day intern: works 7 AM - 7 PM, admits with supervision of senior
– Night intern: works 7 PM - 7 AM, helps cross-cover and can admit
• Interns do one week of nights and one week of days
• Both interns have Sunday off (accommodate switch days and transition
from nights to days)
CICU Resident
• 5 senior residents
– Night call
– Post-call
– Day call
– Helper day
– Pre-call
• Pre-call day between Thursday and Monday is day off
• The Day Call senior, Helper Day senior, Night Call senior, and
Day Shift intern should be present on evening fellow rounds (5
PM)
CICU Resident
• Night call = come in at 4 PM to admit; present patients first on
rounds
• Day call = pre-round and admit patients until 4 PM
• Helper day = pre-round and carry most team cross coverage
• Pre-call = mostly days off
• New system with LOTS of hand-offs; remember all patients are
“ours”
MICU Resident
• Overnight Call – Post Call – Helper Day – Pre Call
• Senior residents get pre-call day off between Friday and Monday (interns
get helper day off during same days)
• Five senior residents in the MICU (plus rotators)
• If two MICU attendings, there are two teams (Blue and Gold)
• If one MICU attending, the entire unit team rounds together
• Senior will be paired with intern, your responsibility to supervise but who
“staffs” directly with fellow
• Helper day = supervise the post call intern (their senior will leave by 11am)
and help out on-call resident until at least 5 PM
MICU Resident
• May have 2 weeks as MICU night resident (have Friday and Saturday nights
off that are covered by MICU moonlighter)
• MICU night resident responsibilities
– Comes at 9 PM
– Cross-covers unit at night
– Alternates admissions with resident on call until 2 AM, then does all
admissions after 2 AM
• Patients admitted by NF will be distributed by the MICU fellow in AM
• NF residents sometimes stay to present patients on rounds (complex
patients)
• Post-call resident will present and leave, sign out to the post call intern
VA Nightfloat Resident
•
•
•
•
Works from 8 PM to 8AM
Cover the VACR pager (medicine consults)
Run codes
Evaluate CARES Tower 6 patients
– If patient needs more evaluation then direct admission
(DO NOT GO TO THE ED)
• VA chief will page you in the morning to distribute patients
• Discuss Code status of patients
• Change team assignment in CPRS (admission order: team)
The NIGHTFLOAT TEAM
NACR
Nightfloat Resident
Rotating MSIII
Nightfloat Intern
Rotating MSIII
Nightfloat Resident
Nightfloat Intern
Nightfloat Intern
UH Nightfloat Resident
• Works from 8 PM to 8AM
• Meets the NACR in the KACR
• Admit patients overnight, works with the nightfloat intern to
help answer questions/manage ill patients.
• NACR is always available if you need help
• Two nightfloat residents, each resident either gets Saturday or
Sunday off (must have 1 nightfloat resident each night)
• Must go to all Code Whites during the first 6 months with
intern
Two Midnight Rule
•Arose out of for profit hospital chain fraud
•Requires attending to sign and admission
order that includes language that the
attending expects the patients medical
problems to require admission for two days
•Some logistical issues on getting attendings to
sign/place order
Running Codes
Code Whites (UH)
** 1ST six months – an upper level must go to
all Code Whites with an intern**
•Sick or decompensating patients on the floor
or Hanna House
•Initial response from ICU nurse, intern, and
PGY2
•DACR/NACR for Level 2 code white
•If you want to transfer to MICU, call MICU
fellow
•Always write a Clinical Event Note!
Code Blues
• Check your own pulse first
• “Too many chefs spoil the soup”
• One person leads the code
• Make sure interns are involved
• Maintain a calm quiet atmosphere
• Keep the ACLS cards in your pocket until you are
comfortable with the protocols
• Make sure your BLS and ACLS are up to date
• CODE BLUE NOTE and notify family; DEATH NOTE if patient
passes; notify attending
Running Codes
• Rule #1: You are in charge
• If uncomfortable, defer to more senior resident
• Delegate, delegate, delegate – assign crowd control, chest compressions,
airway, etc.
• Use the DACR/NACR if you need help
• Don’t be afraid to ask people to leave the room
• Call the ICU nurses by their name, closed-ended communication
• Assign someone to call the family
• Use the Code Note EMR, sign code sheet
Running Codes
Notifying attendings at night
• Most attendings want to be paged and notified (either
of transfer to ICU or death)
• Can clarify with your attending on first day of service
what their preferences are
• Don’t get burned by not calling your attending- you
may hear about it the next day
We are looking forward to a great year together!!!
-SMAK
Questions?