Medical Professionals
This is a community for physicians, PAs, NPs, Nurses, Paramedics, EMTs, CNAs, LPNs, students of medical disciplines, and folks interested in joining the field.
Rules: 1. No discrimination, bigotry, intolerance, or harassment allowed. Instances of such behavior will be deleted, and users with multiple offenses will be banned.
2. Please do not post personal medical questions here. Case reports for discussion are fine, but if you're looking for medical advice, you should consult a physician IRL. If you are trying to figure out what kind of specialist to go to, post a comment to the pinned post.
3. No marketing or advertising of commercial products. Recommendations based on personal experience for educational resources are fine, but outright advertisement is not.
4. Be rad to each other. This field is rough enough as it is, no need to tear each other down. If you have a critical opinion of something, present your arguments as critique of policies or practices in a respectful manner. (e.g. discussions about scope of practice for APPs)
5. PLEASE REPORT THINGS THAT BREAK THE RULES! (At the moment, there is one of me, and I am a medical student with pudding for brains and slim to none in the way of free time [yay clinicals!], so help me out here :D)
6. Flag NSFW/NSFL posts appropriately. If you've been in the field more than a couple months, you've probably got your own little pile of PTSD already, but give folks a warning if you're going to be talking about gnarly stuff. Not everyone is in a good headspace to deal with trauma-dumping or over-sharing. (Note: Discussions of painful or traumatic experiences are allowed, just give folks a heads up before they click.)
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I had patient in their mid 50's with a nearly 90 pack year smoking history (2-3 packs a day since they were a teenager) that wasn't interested in quitting smoking because he thought he would rather die of lung cancer than dementia like his mother did. I spent a good chunk of time explaining how smoking can actually increase chances of dementia, and how much the health consequences of heavy smoking suck. He already had the early stages of COPD and explaining how much worse it could get made it make sense to him.
I had a childhood friend that died from cancer that metastasized to his lungs and my grandmother died from severe emphysema leading to respiratory failure. Amazingly, getting someone to understand that what they're doing is going to result in slowly drowning in their own lungs as they lose surface area and fill up with fluid and tumors really turns on a light-bulb for them. The vivid description of a person gurgling with each breath and the reality that this went on for months or years until it finally killed them was a good illustration. I made good use of my humanities degree where I learned how to use descriptive language to make a convincing argument for this one. The patient did end up agreeing to getting meds to help with quitting and information on support groups to help with it.
I got like halfway through the first paragraph and was Lille "somebody tell this man about vascular dementia!" Glad to hear you did and it worked!