I've been watching this doctor from my 1st year of med school and he never ever gave a bad advice and never presented a cotroversial statement without explanation or with a bias. Way to go prof. Strong. Stay safe!
1. Sit down at bedside with pt 2. Learn an interesting non-medical thing about the pt & ask them about it (hobbies & sports are HY) 3. If dx not made, ask about their perception of dz - what do they think it is/what are they afraid it is? 4. Measure twice, cut once (i.e. before starting procedure, set yourself up for success w/ good positioning using landmarks) 5. Don't tolerate mistreatment 6. Ask pt about transport home prior to d/c 7. You're never above any aspect of pt care no matter how small (i.e. just get them the blanket!) 8. To pts & fam you are Dr X 9. To healthcare professionals you are FirstName (LastName) 10. Ask pt about communicating with fam even if they haven't formally reached out (often their messages fall through the cracks)
Hello, Dr. Strong. Do you do any Master Class or online interactive lectures through platforms like Coursera or other MOOCs? If so, I am sure many many students would love and benefit from your learning style and tutelage. Something to think about. Thanks for the great content.
its hard enough to say I'm dr such and such to patients but towards other healthcare peeps lol eww, UNLESS transferring a patient to another facility who might not know the name of your medicine team (really rare since we the biggest hospital around) and might think you are the transfer coordinator or a nurse trying to give report
l .hate some think called medcine yesterday l had clinical med exame and l did the worse exame everrrrrrr the worse thing that was the last exam in med college ,lam soooo depressed
I've been watching this doctor from my 1st year of med school and he never ever gave a bad advice and never presented a cotroversial statement without explanation or with a bias. Way to go prof. Strong. Stay safe!
I appreciate that a metal track was used for Intro and Outro! :D
Love this! (Speaking as a chronic illness patient and not a medical professional.)
Today was my first day as intern, what a coincidence. Thaks so much!
Thank you for this! I look forward to future episodes!
Great tips! Lets implement all of these 👍
1. Sit down at bedside with pt
2. Learn an interesting non-medical thing about the pt & ask them about it (hobbies & sports are HY)
3. If dx not made, ask about their perception of dz - what do they think it is/what are they afraid it is?
4. Measure twice, cut once (i.e. before starting procedure, set yourself up for success w/ good positioning using landmarks)
5. Don't tolerate mistreatment
6. Ask pt about transport home prior to d/c
7. You're never above any aspect of pt care no matter how small (i.e. just get them the blanket!)
8. To pts & fam you are Dr X
9. To healthcare professionals you are FirstName (LastName)
10. Ask pt about communicating with fam even if they haven't formally reached out (often their messages fall through the cracks)
Thank you for all your amazing videos. Keep it up Dr Strong!!
Great, will follow this series closely! Thanks!
Great for med students too!
Great and really valuable tips nobody should forget! Thanks in sharing them. Kind regards.
Great idea. Thank you so much. Looking forward for the next videos ❤️
Thank you for these great advice!
You make amazing useful videos. Thanks.
Thank you ! Dr Eric Strong
You sir, are amazing! Thank you very much for these:)
Thank you Dr Strong !!
This is so helpful
Amazing tips
I wished I know all these tips many years ago .
Hello, Dr. Strong. Do you do any Master Class or online interactive lectures through platforms like Coursera or other MOOCs? If so, I am sure many many students would love and benefit from your learning style and tutelage. Something to think about. Thanks for the great content.
Thanks doctor
Thanks a lot..
thank you
THank you!!
I am also your new subscriber
Thanks and welcome!
I am ur new subscriber
u r awesome
its hard enough to say I'm dr such and such to patients but towards other healthcare peeps lol eww, UNLESS transferring a patient to another facility who might not know the name of your medicine team (really rare since we the biggest hospital around) and might think you are the transfer coordinator or a nurse trying to give report
l .hate some think called medcine yesterday l had clinical med exame and l did the worse exame everrrrrrr the worse thing that was the last exam in med college ,lam soooo depressed
omg somebody disliked the video already!!!
I know, right? =P