Jul 3, 2010

secret society | SOPOS



I believe my anaesthetic colleagues gonna kill me for this..
but seriously, this is just a joke... no hard feelings, ok..
I found this really hillariously funny...

I guess some of my surgical-based colleagues will think so, too...

Anyway, here's something from the fast lane...

The secret Society of Prevention of Surgery. (SOPOS)

This is what the Director of UCEM’s Inquisitorial Disciplinary Committee had to say:

“We have suspected the existence of such a society for quite some time now. The identities of the society’s members are frequently shrouded in secrecy and are difficult to ascertain. However, UCEM investigators have developed a powerful tool for profiling suspects. Validation studies have repeatedly shown it to have excellent performance characteristics.”

“The profile consists of a scoring system using the following items:

  • even though the anesthetic tech has checked the anesthetic machine three times, the individual always insists on rechecking it his/herself (and, in the process, usually disrupts some key component that the tech then needs to correct while the individual isn’t watching).
  • the individual is left dumbfounded by the notion that there could be more than one way of doing something.
  • the individual draws up each of the following drugs in triplicate (in case two of each fall on the floor at the same time): adrenaline (in at least 4 different dilutions), atropine, ephedrine, intralipid, metaraminol, midazolam, propofol, sugammadex, suxamethonium and thiopentone.
  • the individual regularly attends Sudoku-aholics Anonymous meetings.
  • the individual believes that a serum potassium of 3.3 mmol/L is a strict contra-indication for any kind of surgery — regardless of the indication or patient’s condition.
  • compared to blood stains, coffee stains are at least 12,387 times more likely to be found on the individual’s scrubs.
  • no operation can proceed unless the individual has confirmed that at least 10 units of blood are cross-matched and available in the operating theatre.
  • the individual refers to the drape separating him/herself from the surgeon as ‘the blood-brain barrier’.
  • no operation can proceed unless the patient has at least two 14 gauge intravenous cannulae in situ.
  • no operation can proceed until the individual has found a spare socket for ipod and speakers. (hat tip to @pieterpeach)
  • no operation can proceed until the duty anaesthetist has confirmed that the individual will be relieved for a morning tea break, a lunch break, an afternoon tea break and that come hometime (about 3:30 pm) they will be immediately relieved for urgent convalesence after their full day’s work.
  • when asked to state the main role of the anaesthetist, the individual responds emphatically: “to stop the surgeon killing the patient” (rather than correctly reciting the Anaesthetist’s Hymn — see below).”

“For each of these items 1 point is accumulated. A score of 3 or more has a positive-predictive value of 103.4% for the identification of the individual as a bona fide member of the Society for the Prevention of Surgery.”

“We believe that the use of this tool will allow utopian medical practitioners to identify Society members early, thus allowing any obstacles that may arise to be anticipated and, hopefully, overcome.”

I'd screened through most of my anaesthetic colleagues, i believe none of them were a SOPOS.
Phew... =)

2 comments:

fibrate said...

May I add another...

no ECHO no talk

:)

pilocarpine said...

=)