Apr 29, 2012

BERSIH | Post-mortem

"People tell me they're proud of me for attending the rally. I tell them I'm ashamed of the need of being a part of this. "
quoted from Jing Yean


now what do we do with a quarter of a million angry people?

by Shern Ren Tee on Saturday, April 28, 2012 at 7:44pm ·
Alright, so Bersih 3.0 has come and is starting to go. The sit-in protest was scheduled to end at 4:30, and the organizers have asked the public to leave, but it seems that for some on both sides the end of the official protest only means the start of extracurricular activities.

Rovio took the opportunity to publish a Malaysian upgrade to Angry Birds: the special edition silver-colored TearBird smokes out green pigs (and yellow protestors) without needing to destroy surrounding structures. Meanwhile, in a Marvel publicity stunt sure to go viral on YouTube, several demonstrators overturned a police car, which is clearly meant to evoke the exploits of The Hulk just as Avengers debuts in local cinemas.

But really, what on Earth were a quarter of a million Malaysians doing charging down the roads of KL, braving police violence, body odor, unpredictable weather (on top of all the hot air streaming from Putrajaya) and inevitable political hijacking? What would compel some of us - normally half an hour late to even the most sumptuous wedding dinner - to wait at Dataran Merdeka a whopping sixteen hours (from 10pm last night) for what was basically an overcrowded picnic with no food, no sitting space, and no fashion sense? As Tashny Sukumaran tweeted: "when Malaysians are early, you know shit just got real." We were early and polite to policemen and singing the national anthem with pride and taking orders from redshirts (sorry, Trekkie joke) and talking to people of other ethnicities and generally enjoying being around people for once -

it's like we all decided to try being Australian this afternoon or something. (Well, one did look pretty authentic - good one mate.)

What were a quarter of a million people doing on the streets of KL today? We were being angry. Angry with the state of affairs in this nation, angry with the callous incompetence at all echelons of government and civil service, angry with blatant abuse and mismanagement, angry with our own sustained indifference for half a century, angry with water cannons, angry with last year's death, angry with this year's diffidence, angry, angry, angry. And we have every right to be. Our anger is phenomenal, but so is the potential our country has wasted over fifty-five years of independence. Twelve elections later, with a thirteenth impending, the quality of our leaders shows little sign of improving, and our popular political discourse still revolves around angels and demons and who penetrated who where.

But so what if we're angry? Being angry without thinking just makes us like the Hulk: green with rage, awesomely powerful but utterly insensible. The Marvel fans will remember recent events in the life of the Hulk. The greatest minds of the Marvel universe convened and decided that the Hulk was too unstable, too dangerous. They had him shipped off Earth to a distant desert planet against his will, where he overthrew the oppressors of that planet and, as its ruler, came back to Earth.

Isn't that a story of redemption and the triumph of justice? Not really: in the sequel, the Hulk beats the living daylights out of every other hero on the planet, puts mind-controlling obedience disks on them and forces them to battle each other to the death, and plans to destroy the New York city he once protected as an Avenger; he is only saved when one of his desert planet allies reveals himself as the saboteur who caused his grief and is defeated as the real enemy.

I am glad that the people have found their anger, and have started to chip against the mental imprisonment which the state has so long inflicted on them. I am glad that a quarter of a million people showed their anger on the streets of KL, but it cannot stop there. It must not stop there. An election every five years does not a democracy make, it is true; but the freedom of speech and assembly are not to be protected just so we can wash the streets of KL yellow one random weekend too. The mob must be taught - the mob must learn to think. We who march must learn also to speak, and to ask the difficult questions: how do we prevent PR from becoming the next BN? Will the compromising pragmatism of PKR always be able to hold secularist DAP together with sectarian-religious PAS? What happens when that uneasy pact breaks down? Who will make sure, in a day when both sides of the political divide are increasingly playing chicken rather than governing the land justly, that our political parties are training up future leaders of principle, and that civil society will find its successors to the boldly impartial Ambiga and Pak Samad?

Why have a free election unless there are leaders worth electing? Why kick out corruption if the only alternative is shallow populism? And why choose if you don't even understand what you're choosing between?

I am glad for all the young people, whether they are under my care or simply ones I know, who have found empowerment and liberation in marching down the streets of KL - who have even found joy in the face of tear gas and chemical-laced water, because they were suffering for the sake of something larger. I envy them (as my circumstances prevented me from joining them in person) and I am proud of them. But we cannot let this Bersih business stop at simply the warm glow of anger marching with anger: who knows how little time it would take for that to turn into the numb amusement of an Angry Bird player? They, for one, have long forgotten about getting the eggs back from the pigs in their quest for a high score for doing as much damage as possible - not as needed - to the status quo.

We must think beyond the yellow tide. We must advance this country beyond the necessity of a Bersih 4.0. We must bring change with all the anger we can find; but we must steer change with even more wisdom. Only then will we be sure that Malaysia will never vanish from the face of the Earth.

Apr 28, 2012

BERSIH 3.0 Peaceful Penang

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BERSIH | the puisi

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Hikayat Putera Kemuning
KURANG 24 JAM LAGI untuk kita
Bersama berkumpul dalam satu cita
Menunjukkan sedih pilu Rakyat  semua
Yang dahagakan kebenaran!
Yang dahagakan ketelusan!
Yang dahagakan keadilan dalam pilihanraya!
Seluruh diaspora Malaysia sepertimana dahulukala
Dalam negeri mahupun luar negara
Bersatu hati dengan impian yang nyata
Berhimpun lagi pada esok hari 
Baju kuning yang sama pelbagai versi
Bergerak bersama bersatu hati
Meninggalkan keluarga demi 
Yang tua, Yang muda, Yang sakit, Yang lemah
Bersama semua DUDUK DAN BANTAH!
Anak ku sama serupa sahaja
Anwar Ibrahim katamu ku ulang semula
India, Melayu dan yang Cina
Semua bersama mengangkat suara!

KAMI BANTAH!
KAMI BANTAH!
KAMI BANTAH!

Rona-rona kuning bertaburan
Dipaksa lari bertempiaran
Namun hati teguh berdiri
NIATKU BUKAN UNTUK PERIBADI!

New Zealand, Jepun termasuk Arab Saudi
Sokongan tidak berbelah bahagi
Demi negara dan masa hadapan
Aku berdiri demi keadilan!

Puncak Gunung Everest sudah ditawan
Sejuk, panas khatulistiwa semua berperanan
menunjukkan kasih dan sayang kepada
Negara Malaysia Tanah Airku Tercinta!

Hentikan kezaliman, penindasan, penipuan
Hentikan samseng, tiga-line dan bunohan
Agar Rakyat dapat merasa
Kemewahan negara sementara ada

AYUH! kita kentalkan semangat
AYUH! kita naikkan kalimat
Sakti yang menggegarkan, mengempitakan, mengasyikkan
HIDUP RAKYAT! Semarakkan Perjuangan!

Apr 27, 2012

BERSIH 3.0 Morning




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Not so long ago, there was Bersih 2.0 which came back more BERSIH than the initial one.
It was more chaotic not due to the peaceful demonstration, but because of the uncontrolled retaliation and show of power by the Police.

Police pointed the water cannon wherever they like, shot tear gas into wherever they like - even into Hospital.
Even in Songkran festival, Thai people have the basic IQ and brain not to involve the hospital.
Yet, did not have the guts to admit their mistake.
All of them really should grow a pair.

And here's BERSIH 3.0.

Would have been peaceful outings for everyone if the Balisan's leaders would stand out and march together with the Rakyat in Yellow, instead of closing the Dataran, this and that road to show off their 'power'.

Ah-Jib Kor should just walk together, instead of being in Sabah right now.

What's wrong with the supporting a fair election system?
If you win based on an unfair election system, does that make you REAL winner?
Nope. That will only make you a Loser, a Pussy who can't take the Yellow Fever.

Cheers to Bersih 3.0
 
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Here's the permit !!


The reason being Bersih!!

Apr 23, 2012

Apr 21, 2012

Sex kills

Caution: If you're of mental age of 18 and below, kindly refrain from reading further. Consider yourself being warned.


Thus far, personally, the only sex-related injuries that I had attended before is post-coital vaginal injury.
3 patients.

1. Referred from casualty for heavy menses for 4 days. Intrigued by the history of having previous regular menses and just had her menses 1 week ago. Additional history confirmed the bleeding started postcoital. My fingers were able to felt the posterior uterus on vaginal examination. Unable to believe my tactile finding, confirmed it with a nearby pelvic ultrasound. Repair done in Operation Theatre. Unremarkable recovery.

2. Straight from Casualty to OT, white as sheet of paper. Young patient. Massive vaginal tear up to part of cervix near 3'o clock (the point for massive maroon tide). Sutured well up by my skillful specialist. Suspected the involvement of inanimate object in the sexual practice, did not confirmed it, though. Massive transfusion. ICU observation. Unremarkable recovery.

3. Referred for heavy post coital bleeding by a bright house officer at Casualty. Unable to find the bleeder by speculum by a bright house officer in ward. Bells rang. Repeated confirmed speculum revealed a small superficial 3cm superficial laceration. Packed with flavin-soaked vaginal pack. The next morning, still bleeding, pulse rate gone up and clinically mild pallor. Repacked again, sent to OT for repair. Removed the repeated packing, no more bleeding. fml. put in a 'reassurance' stitch. Unremarkable recovery.

Sex is indeed lethal. Sex kills and hurts in more way than you know.

It goes from the triggering excitement of sex or orgasm to induce a heart attack or intracranial bleed,
to a gentle good night kiss with a super-allergen on the lips OR firing away a carotid embolus,
to traumatic injuries to the genitals for both gender.
(female: vaginal laceration, male: captivating penis captivus)


If you're depressed and sad because sex (or lack of) has hurt your feeling, perhaps you should be grateful that you came out of it alive and uninjured.

So, do you have any interesting lethal sex story to share?

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Interesting write-up by Chris Nickson below.
Ask not: "is this love?" Ask: "is it dangerous?"...

No, I’m not talking about revenge killings by jilted lovers, sexually transmitted infections, or the intrinsic hazards of extramarital dalliances. Love itself is dangerous. If you don’t believe me, read on to learn about all the ways amorous acts can threaten life, limb and… other body parts.
Banerjee A. Coital emergencies. Postgrad Med J. 1996 Nov;72(853):653-6. PMID: 8944205; PMCID: PMC2398623.
  1. Neurological — benign coital headache, aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage, cerebrovascular accidents
  2. Urological — penile fracture, priapism, preputial tears, penile vessel rupture
  3. Cardiovascular — sudden cardiac death, myocardial infarction
  4. Soft tissue — soft tissue wounds, soft tissue infection
  5. Immunological — local allergic reactions, anaphylaxis
Risk of sex death
Data on the risk of death during intercourse aren’t great. One retrospective study found that of people that die, about 1 in 500 were having intercourse at the time (or thereabouts). One suspects the rate could be higher: do you routinely asks the bereaved, “So, were you having sex at the time?”? The cause of death during intercourse is usually myocardial infarction, although intracerebral hemorrhage and subarachnoid hemorrhage must not be forgotten.
  • Parzeller M, Raschka C, Bratzke H. Sudden cardiovascular death in correlation with sexual activity — results of a medicolegal postmortem study from 1972–1998. Eur Heart J. 2001 Apr;22(7):610-1. PMID: 11259149. [Fulltext]
  • Reynolds MR, Willie JT, Zipfel GJ, Dacey RG. Sexual intercourse and cerebral aneurysmal rupture: potential mechanisms and precipitants. J Neurosurg. 2010 Jun 11. PMID: 20540599.
So far, so good. What we’ve discussed so far has been fairly standard. But seriously weird and bad things can happen during acts of love… As you’re about to find out.

Love bites
A recent report from New Zealand described a case of partial paralysis due to a ‘hickey’ or ‘love bite’. Excess suction was applied over her internal carotid artery, resulting in thrombosis…
  • Wu TY, Hsiao J, Wong EH. Love bites — an unusual cause of blunt internal carotid artery injury. NZMJ. 2010; 123(1326) PMID: 21326406 [full text]
Two views of the internal carotid artery in the affected patient. The arrows point to thrombus. Longitudinal view on the left, transverse on the right. From Wu et al (2010) (Click image for source)
Love allergies
Allergies and love do not mix. Steensma has described how a good night kiss, from a shrimp-eating boyfriend, nearly killed his shellfish-allergic girlfriend. Furthermore, women can actually be allergic to sex. Acute systemic hypersensitivity or localised vulvovaginitis can occur as a result of allergic reactions to semen. The sensitivity is not partner specific — condoms or abstinence are the immediate options for cure. Also, exogenous allergens (such as Brazil nuts, for example) can find their way into semen, and cause allergic reactions in receptive partners. Finally, there is an odd condition that can affect men (@DrVes told me about it) known as Postorgasmic illness syndrome (POIS). POIS is a combination of local allergic symptoms and transient flu-like illness. It may be that POIS is triggered by ejaculation and results from hypersensitivity to the male’s own semen!
  • Allergy Notes: Sexually transmitted allergy to Brazil nuts. [link]
  • Jones WR. Allergy to coitus. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 1991 May;31(2):137-41. PMID: 1681800.
  • Steensma DP. The kiss of death: a severe allergic reaction to a shellfish induced by a good-night kiss. Mayo Clin Proc. 2003 Feb;78(2):221-2. PMID: 12583533.
  • Waldinger MD, Meinardi MM, Zwinderman AH, Schweitzer DH. Postorgasmic Illness Syndrome (POIS) in 45 Dutch Caucasian Males: Clinical Characteristics and Evidence for an Immunogenic Pathogenesis (Part 1). J Sex Med. 2011 Jan 17. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 21241453.
Love emboli
Air emboli from sex can kill. The risk is probably higher not long after birth (especially if amphetamines are taken prior to intercourse), as it may take a while for those big uteroplacental arteries to involute after birth. However, vaginal tears from consensual intercourse, irrespective of pregnancy status, also have the potential to cause fatal air emboli. As always, any paper written by Batman is a must read:
  • Batman PA, Thomlinson J, Moore VC, Sykes R. Death due to air embolism during sexual intercourse in the puerperium. Postgrad Med J. 1998 Oct;74(876):612-3. PMID: 10211360;  PMCID: PMC2361003.
  • Moreschi C, Da Broi U. Paradoxical air embolism through patent foramen ovale during consensual intercourse in a non-pregnant young female. J Forensic Leg Med. 2009 Nov;16(8):482-5. Epub 2009 Aug 7. PMID: 19782322.
Traumatic love and its complications
Vaginal injuries from consensual intercourse can lead to other problems. Pneumoperitoneum was reported following ‘conventional’ intercourse, with a 4cm vaginal laceration identified as the culprit. There was no mention of whether genital jewelry was involved. Another nasty complication from ‘normal’ coitus, as described by Ijaiya et al (2009) is rectovaginal fistula formation. The victim was later divorced by her loving husband.
  • Manchanda R, Refaie A. Acute pneumoperitoneum following coitus. CJEM. 2005 Jan;7(1):51-3.  PMID: 17355655.
  • Ijaiya MA, Mai AM, Aboyeji AP, Kumanda V, Abiodun MO, Raji HO. Rectovaginal fistula following sexual intercourse: a case report. Ann Afr Med. 2009 Jan-Mar;8(1):59-60. PMID: 19763010.
Penis injuries are a bit ho-hum for the seasoned emergency physician. But, it is probably worth mentioning posterior urethral injury as a cause of hematospermia after intercourse and to provide a link to a nasty case of penile fracture associated with urtheral injury. Some blokes need target practice… or less acrobatic partners.
  • Boncher NA, Vricella GJ, Jankowski JT, Ponsky LE, Cherullo EE. Penile fracture with associated urethral rupture. Case Report Med. 2010;2010:791948.  PMID: 21076536;  PMCID: PMC2975082.
  • Cheng YS, Lin JS, Lin YM. Isolated posterior urethral injury: an unusual complication and presentation following male coital trauma. Asian J Androl. 2006 May;8(3):379-81. PMID: 16625291.
The mystery of penis captivus
Finally, we wouldn’t be living in the fast lane if we didn’t mention the most enigmatic of all coital conditions, penis captivus. Here are some relative modern reports from the BMJ suggesting that, yes, the condition actually does exist.
  • Taylor FK. Penis captivus — did it occur? Br Med J. 1979 Oct 20;2(6196):977-8. PMID: 509182; PMCID: PMC1596579.
  • Musgrave B. Penis captivus has occurred. Br Med J. 1980 Jan 5;280(6206):51. PMID: 7357285; PMCID: PMC1600543.
I have a high degree of suspicion regarding the spuriosity of the cases in Taylor’s review. One in particular stands out:
“Kisch, in his Sexual Life of Women,- speaks of “more or less credible instances of penis captivus” being on record. He mentions an account by a medical man called Davis, not otherwise identified, who was one day called to a couple found in this “most compromising position. All the endeavours of the pair thus surprised to separate proved ineffectual, and their attempts to draw apart caused them intense pain. Davis… ordered an iced douche, which, however, failed to liberate the imprisoned penis. Release was impossible until the woman had been placed under chloroform. The swollen and livid penis exhibited two strangulation-furrows.”"
A medical man called Davis? Who could that be I wonder? Perhaps an ancestor of UCEM’s PR Supervisor, the famed psychiatric surgeon Assistant Sub-Professor Egerton Y. Davis IV? Surely not? Read penis captivus and decide for yourself… As for the letter by Musgrave, one cannot help but wonder about medical doctors and their overactive imaginations. Indeed, the BMJ was clearly having a good month for letters back then — the letter immediately preceding it concerned ‘The Interesting New Zealander‘.

Conclusion
Life is a risky business. It is for the individual to decide if how they live it is worth the risk. But, what would life be without love?
Safer, is one answer.

Jangan jeling-jeling

Overheard in clinic

Jangan jeling-jeling,
Jangan tulis-tulis,
MC bagi saya tulis,
Time slip pun tulis,
Janganlah begitu, 
Sebab saya spehsiarlis.

Sang to the tune of Kalau Berpacaran.

A tribute to miscommunication.



Apr 19, 2012

Sacrifices...


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Shown this picture to wifey today

Wifey: If it were us, it will be you inside the 'tong', because you don't have a motorbike license.
Me: (=,=")

For the record, despite being busy playing all her important roles in our lives, wifey managed to help me in the biggest way. Both of us were mentally-stressed, mentally-drained and mentally-relieved now.

Apr 16, 2012

The passing of a house officer

Public announcement should not be made out of convenience.
Decision should not be made out of 'knee-jerk' reaction.


Dear Health Minister,
Your statement surrounding the death of late Dr. Lee taken all of us by surprise.
Mainly because a person of your stature and status, we were expecting more professionalism.

None of us were given the accurate information regarding circumstances around the death of late Dr. Lee.
And yet, the reflex statement had successfully labelled all the medical officers, specialists and Consultants as the main source of depression, leading to the unfortunate death of late Dr. Lee.
Is this a fair judgement to all doctors, except house officers, to be falsely accused?

As opposed to what was reported in The Star, late Dr. Lee was not a graduate from Uruguay, but from Ukraine (Crimea State Medical University) and the reason his service was extended to 3 years because he went absence without official leave or MIA for 9 months.

I believe Health Minister should revealed to us what was his reason for the 9 months absence and how was his performance as a medical graduate from Ukraine. The controversy about CSMU in June 2005 should also be given some attention.

It is rather unfortunate that it is an open secret that the medical schools of Russia and Ukraine had always provided slightly inferior medical training, mainly because of the language struggle of our Malaysian students. Yet, more parents were happy to send their children there due to two main reasons. Firstly, the school fees which is just a fraction of price of well-reputed medical school. Secondly, the acceptance grade is never as high as others. The medical students there had to struggle in writing and answering in foreign language that most had failed to grasp the basic in medical knowledge. Nevertheless, those who had diligently overcome this are better doctors, compared to others.

When in the real working world, basic medical knowledge is a strict requirement.
It is similar to any working world.

Here's the analogy.
You want to be a clerk, you will need to have at least basic literacy knowledge.
Because the basic literacy knowledge is what is required in the line of duty.
Or else, you won't be hired. As simple as that.
You don't hire them, then expect the manager or supervisor to start teaching them ABC.
And if the office boy could not perform, he will receive a suggestion of tendering his letter of resignation.
There is no place for depression.
It is also beyond common sense for General Manager to meet all the clerks weekly to make sure they do not have depression.
Yet, Malaysia Boleh, anything also Boleh happen.

Depression is not a joke.
The passing of late Dr.Lee should serve as a warning sign to the Health Ministry and to the nation.

We need to uphold a standard before accepting everyone into the house officers' training and creating house officers' glut.
The Health Ministry should seriously liase with Higher Education Ministry and Public Service Department about this matter urgently.
If you decided to allow primary 6 students straight to University and expect them not to be depressed, you're out of your head. And when there is a death, his blood is all over your hands.

The government should uphold the previous half-baked moratorium on medical schools seriously.
Stop fooling with the medical fraternity. 
Lastly, medical officers, specialists and Consultants all over Malaysia feel like as if we are running medical schools in our hospitals. Yet, we continue our struggle, we continue to strive to make every house officers better doctors for the future.

Public announcement should not be made out of convenience

Thus, it is only appropriate and respectful for the Health Minister to apologize for the baseless generalisation and to refrain from such statement in the future.

Signed,
Pilocarpine

Attached: reference articles below

A trainee doctor was found dead in a restroom at Kajang Hospital.

Police believe he had overdosed on an unidentified drug.
Lee Chang Tat, 29, was found dead in the men's room of the paediatric ward at 7am yesterday by hospital staff who went looking for him after they noticed that he was missing.
He was found with a used syringe beside him, which police believe he had used to inject himself with a drug to fight off fatigue.
It is learnt that Lee, who had been working at the hospital for the past three years, had been working on call for five consecutive days.
Selangor health director Datuk Dr Azman Abu Bakar said hospital staff, who found Lee, tried to resuscitate him but were unsuccessful.
“He was rushed to the emergency room but it was too late,” he said.
Lee, he stressed, had no previous medical problems.
A security guard at the hospital said they found him when someone tried calling Lee on his handphone and heard the ringing tone coming from the restroom.
“We broke into the toilet cubicle and found him lying there with the needle,” he said.
Kajang OCPD Asst Comm Abdul Rashid Abdul Wahab said Lee, who studied medicine in Uruguay, had been complaining to his family about the hectic working hours.
“His family said he had also been planning to go on a holiday to Cambodia soon with friends,” he said.
ACP Abdul Rashid confirmed that an initial post-mortem indicated that Lee had died of an overdose, adding that the case was being investigated as sudden death.

Houseofficer found dead (II)


The Star, like China Press got it wrong as to where the late Dr. Lee was trained. Checks with the MMC website shows that he graduated from Ukraine (CSMU), and not Uruguay. We’ve posted quite a few times in the past about CSMU and given that there are concerns about the training graduates from CSMU receive, and that such training may not adequately prepare them for life as a doctor in Malaysia, one cannot help but wonder if this added to the “stress” the late Dr. Lee endured. Other details emerging from the Dobbs doctors forum are that it was reported in a Chinese daily that he was AWOL for nine months during his training and, after appeal, he was made to repeat his training from scratch. 

Housemen still being overworked and bullied, sending some into depression

KUALA LUMPUR: The Health Ministry will conduct checks on the shift system for housemen in hospitals in the wake of reports that trainee doctors are still being overworked, bullied by seniors as well as suffering from depression.
Under the Graduate Medical Officer Flexi Timetable system, introduced last September, housemen can only work up to 60 hours a week with two days off. But implementation has been reportedly poor at some hospitals.
Health director-general Datuk Seri Dr Hasan Abdul Rahman said the ministry would seek explanations from hospitals found overworking their housemen, adding that the ministry was willing to help them implement the system effectively if they were facing a shortage of housemen.
However, he said he had checked timetables in Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Ampang Hospital, Serdang Hospital, Klang Hospital, Selayang Hospital and Sungai Buloh Hospital but had not seen any houseman made to work for more than five days a week or to do double shifts.
Earlier, Malaysian Medical Association president Dr Mary Cardosa urged the ministry to review the shift system and conduct a study on the mental health of junior doctors.
On the death of Dr Lee Chang Tat, 29, who was found dead in a restroom of the paediatrics ward at Kajang Hospital with a used syringe beside him, she said there was no data to show the number of housemen who suffered from depression due to their long working hours and stress.
“There should be some kind of mechanism to assist troubled doctors, whether they have personal or work-related problems or can't handle the stress.”
The Malaysian Medical Council, meanwhile, reviews an average of five cases of doctors with mental health issues each month. It is learnt that there were 20 cases last October.
“Most of them are housemen, but we have also heard cases on medical officers,” said former Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Ismail Merican.
“The types of issues range from psychiatric problems to anxiety and coping problems,” Dr Ismail said.
Dr Ismail, who is also former MMC chairman, said the working hours for housemen may not be as demanding as before the shift system was implemented, but they were exposed to other sources of stress in their work including demands from patients, their superiors and other colleagues,” he added.

System that’s a burden to many housemen


PETALING JAYA: A 27-year-old houseman lamented that although the shift system was good, it was poorly implemented at his hospital.
He claimed that it was up to each department to implement the system.
The houseman alleged that when he first joined the hospital, he had to work 92 hours a week and on 24-hour shifts for up to one and a half months.
But things improved after someone brought up the issue to the management.
However, for departments that lacked housemen, they had to work long hours and without on-call allowance.
This was because allowances were not provided for in the shift system and housemen were not expected to work more than 72 hours a week, he added.
The houseman said they were paid a fixed RM600 a month but without the RM100 to RM200 allowance for each on-call duty.
He also claimed that eight housemen suffered depression and were under psychiatric observation as they could not take the bullying from senior doctors, whom he said constantly shouted and belittled them.
They were also burdened with a training duration that was extended from four to six or seven months for each department.
“One houseman went into depression after he failed his assessment twice,” he said, adding that some housemen got themselves transferred to another hospital or just resigned.
Another houseman Dr G.M. Pillai, 28, said Ipoh Hospital was trying its best to adhere to the rules set by the Health Ministry.
“We work 60 to 65 hours a week and sometimes up to 70 hours. But if we have to work up to 70 hours, we are given less hours the following week,” he said.
Before the shift system was introduced, he had worked up to 36 hours.
But, after it was implemented, the hours were capped at a maximum of 20 and they get a whole day off the next day, he said.

Housemen to meet hospital director weekly: Liow

KUALA LUMPUR: Housemen in goverment hospitals nationwide will have a weekly session with the Hospital Director or Deputy Director to iron out issues pertaining to being overworked, bullying and depression, said Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai on Saturday.
He said they should express their views and complaints during such sessions with a view to improving their training.
"I am very concerned about all the problems faced by housemen including working hours and workload. I will make sure that their welfare will be protected," he told a press conference here.
Earlier, he had opened the Nutrition Month Malaysia 2012 which is jointly organised by the Nutrition Society of Malaysia, the Malaysian Dietitians Association and Malaysian Association for the Study of Obesity.
Noting that the quality of doctors was very important, Liow said the housemen should be given ample time for training and that the ministry may review the current two-year training period.
Malaysian Medical Association (MMA) president Dr Mary Cardosa had recently urged the ministry to review the shift system and conduct a study on the mental health of junior doctors.
The Graduate Medical Officer Flexi Timetable system introduced last year requires housemen to work up to 60 hours a week with two off days.
Elaborating, Liow said the ministry would probe allegations of poor implementation of the new timetable system.
Nevertheless, Liow said he was pleased with the response from housemen on the new system, which allowed them adequate time to learn and rest. Bernama


April 13, 2012
APRIL 13 — “A trainee doctor was found dead after an overdose. He was found dead with a used syringe beside him, with a drug used to fight off fatigue.” The Star, April 12, 2012.
For me, this is an issue close to my heart.
A few years ago, a friend of mine committed suicide by jumping from his apartment on the fourth floor of an apartment complex. He was a jolly good fellow, but faced a few bumps in his years as a medical student.
And throughout the years I worked as a houseman, two of my colleagues broke down and are under psychiatric follow-up, another four quit the profession while two others left for Australia.
My consultant used to call those who break down “collateral damage.”
I had my ups and downs those days. Some days I worked 36 hours straight, no rest, a Snickers bar in between, and was expected to be sharp, smart, alert, and to make the right calls at the same time. At one time, I remembered going home at 7pm, after 36 hours of working, only to be called back to the ward at 10pm because of someone else’s mistake.
No human should be treated this way. Expecting us to make the right decisions, and to treat patients well while depriving us of sleep and rest is ridiculous.
As if that was not bad enough, we were often subjected to verbal abuse in the wards, at times in front of patients and their family members. Some of us were even employed as security guards to chase away family members during non-visiting hours, and as a dispatcher running around searching for old notes.
I’m not sure what it is like now but those were the “good” old days.
Though the system produced good, resilient, disciplined, military-like doctors, there were a few who fell along the way from fatigue and mental breakdown.
Ten years back, we were short of doctors. Now, we have an oversupply of them in the hospitals. I used to take care of 16 patients in the ward and, now, from what I gather each houseman takes care of five to six patients only. And since some of the hospitals are computerised, they are no longer running around dispatching notes and results.
If this applies to most of the government hospitals, it must mean that their workload is markedly reduced.
I suppose the Ministry of Heath has begun to realise that housemen learn, think, respond better when they are well rested. I would rather have a few energetic, well-rested doctors treating me rather than more of those tired, sleep-deprived doctors at my bedside. On that note kudos to the Ministry of Health.
But then, as the working hours become shorter, and workload lighter, the quality of doctors we produce may now be an issue.
The Ministry of Health should conduct stringent tests before these doctors complete their housemanship. If they don’t perform or have an attitude problem, don’t pass them and keep them in the system for as long as it takes.
Revoke their title, bar them from practising if necessary, because what is worse than a tired doctor is one with a bad attitude and knowledge.
As much as housemen deserve better treatment, it should not be at the expense of our patients.
It is a good idea to make compulsory SPM/STPM leavers do community and volunteer work in hospitals, nursing homes, orphanages before applying to take up medicine. Aptitude and attitude tests are also a good way to judge someone’s character, but it is by no means a conclusive test to vet a person.
I mention all this because I do not want houseman to suffer from professional disillusionment. It needs to be addressed before they even step into medical schools or we may end up spending hundreds of thousands of ringgit training doctors, who at the end of the day realise ,”Hey, I do not want to do this for a living.”
Which is what we are beginning to see in our young doctors.
You may have a string of As in your exam but the passion you have in helping a fellow human being is the one that determines how good of a doctor you are.
Patch Adams said, “Our job is improving the quality of life, not just delaying death.”
A good working environment, and attitude is important in any profession especially medicine. And when the government is taking steps to improving their working condition, housemen should learn to count their blessings that they have been given an opportunity to serve humanity.
It is a privilege that not many have.
If all fails, then perhaps our SPM leavers should ponder on this quote by German born American physician Martin Henry Fischer before taking up medicine, “A doctor must work 18 hours a day and seven days a week. If you cannot console yourself to this, get out of the profession.”
Because when the going gets tough, it is the tough who get going.

Apr 13, 2012

Earthquaking

2 days ago.

Public holiday.

New Agong's Day.

It was a lazy day that I decided to be diligent. 
Sort of dumb and inappropriate, I think.
I should be sleeping soundly after 3 hours of almost non-stop badminton in the morning.

It was more exhausting than usual, thanks to a few friends who 'let go of airplane' last minute.

I was sorting out my drawers which is piling up with a few mountains of important documents.
Fan was blowing behind me. Not oscillating as I was alone in the room.

After 2 hours of digging through the stacks, I suddenly felt my chair swayed slightly to the left and right.
Michael Buble's song came into mind.

It feels like earthquake, it shakes like earthquake, it spins like earthquake.
But can't really say that it's definitely an earthquake.

I went out of the room, on my feet. The spinning was less, but the 'vertigo' persisted.

I was wondering whether it was my wife on hoola hoops upstairs.
I asked her when she came down. She was on hoola hoops.

Then the phone rang.
It was my uncle.
In a way, he was doubting himself, too and wanted our confirmation of the moving earth.

Next, it was my colleague's text, stating how awesome it was to be earthquaking!

Last bit of confirmation I needed was to go into FB and all the reel of updates came through.

https://fbcdn-sphotos-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/574517_427929717222102_285289024819506_1756175_1299641540_n.jpg

Not just real serious updates, but also dumb ones.
Like how suicidal people can be.
Holding up camera and waiting at the seaside to catch a glimpse of tsunami.

There's another fella who bragged that he was crossing the bridge like a Boss.
Maybe it's a substitute for bungee-jumping or sky-diving. Maybe.

The tsunami alert was lifted soon after the predicted aqua armageddon of 9pm.
Nevertheless, it was a night of full of thoughts about what's next if it really happened.

Nothing good can be expected from a high waves of fluids, even if it's beer (named as 1814 beer-nami)

I got myself away from this disaster, but landed myself in another, the day after.

FML. FML. (yes, double) and now still picking up the pieces.

Apr 12, 2012

拿BOOK出来了

http://i444.photobucket.com/albums/qq168/DeviousW/MsDevious/tv_01b.gif


830pm TV8

Grandma   : "孙悟空"还有吗?
Aedan     : 没有... 孙悟空拿BOOK出来了...
Grandma   : (=,=")

Apr 10, 2012

When man menstruates...

One of good difference between men and women is menopause, because men-no-pause.
Men will go on forever and ever and ever.
Of course, on extremely rare occasion, obligates the recognition of the contribution of sildenafil.

Beyond imagination but true.

What about menstruation?
Can men menstruate?
Not technically menstruating.
Nevertheless it is possible to have a medical consultation of primary amenorrhea for boys!
It's the failure for the boys to start male-menstruating or rather called as "manstruation"
The lack of manstrual cycle in the boys causes anxiety and doubts in the parents.
In those places, the extraordinary is the norm. 
But real men do not menstruate.
The business drive for sanitary pads for boys is in actual fact the parasite infection of urinary tract or intestines by Schistosoma haematobium.

male and female schistosomes
egg

Also cleverly known as Schistosomiasis.
In some tropical peoples that work in wet places such as rice fields, most boys pick up Schistosoma, and start the bleeding, about puberty when they start working in the rice fields, and uneducated locals think that it is normal and refer to it as the male equivalent of female menstruation, and call it by their native language word for "menstruation".[1]

In at least one case, it was reported that a boy in an affected area started work in a factory instead of the rice fields, and so did not pick up Schistosoma, and did not develop the bleeding, and his father took him to a doctor asking for investigation of primary amenorrhoea.
Source: Wikipedia
It is not a serious illness, but it will simply make one weaker primarily down with anemia (lack of oxygen carrying agents in blood cells).

Secondly, it will pathetically present with slight shrinkage of penis (dafuq!) and rare symptoms such as yellowish discharge from the penis, excitedness when least expected (This could be potentially positive), and an undescribable odd feeling (potential orgasm?)
This is to be distinguished from genuine menstruation in an anatomically intersex human who has a functioning menstruating womb but external sexual organs which are on the male side of ambiguous in form, or the menstruation experienced by trans men.
Source: Wikipedia.

Schistosoma haematobium's life cycle below.

lifecycle

P.S. It's not cool for men to have menses.
Men's 'bird' never ever require extra pair of 'wings'. 

P.S. Too bad for men. Men can't conveniently go for MC with primary dysmenorrhea.

Apr 7, 2012

What Freshly Grad Doctor Should Know...


http://www.dilbert.com/dyn/str_strip/000000000/00000000/0000000/100000/50000/1000/900/151902/151902.strip.gif

It is awesome but at the same time, perfect sympathy for new doctors who just recently confirmed their pass in the Final.
Congrats (cynically) to my dear buddy CL.
I hopefully you will grow well in the midst of the houseman glut.

From me, frankly, I am not  wise enough to provide good valuable advice.
Nevertheless, I'm cool enough (self-proclaimed) to give short and snappy tips.
I asked of you to make 4 promises:
1. Never to give up
2. Grow in the world of medicine at your own comfortable pace
3. Never neglect your family/life-partner
3. Be a bitch/bastard only if it's absolutely necessary

Perhaps a good read, it's something that I pimped over from Dr. Edwin Leap. 
Raising doctors, beta version.

This lecture was recently delivered to the weekly student convocation at Erskine College. I’ve already posted a link to a story about it, but this is the text I used.
It is in thinking of my children that I decided what to say to you today. You see, at least two of my children have said to me that they would like to become physicians. Now, that may change. They’re still young. They may yet become dancers, musicians, craftsmen or many other things. But if they choose to follow my path, I have some things to teach them. And so, since many of you are young enough to be my children, and since some of you may also desire to become medical doctors, I will share some advice with you.
It occurred to me once that medicine is not like it used to be. I cannot allow my children to follow me around and learn as my apprentices as they might have in centuries past. And when they are in school, medicine will have changed far too much for me to be their teacher in the science of it all. But I can be their teacher in the art. Because, cliché as it sounds, and no matter how much we become absorbed in scientific evidence, medicine is an art. Anyone who tells you otherwise has not practiced enough, or has forgotten what it was like to practice.
So, I give you the Beta version of ‘Raising doctors.’ But it might also be called ‘Raising wise, compassionate adults.’ Because the traits I want to inculcate into my four little interns are traits we all need in large quantities, if we are to navigate the world for good.
So, what would I tell my children? What advice can I give you from years in the emergency room? Rules of thumb and a few stories.

First, about humanity.

I Humans are good. I have seen old couples love one another to the very end. An aged couple once touched me…she had hemangiomas all over her face, and he was kind as any old man I ever met. They loved each other so, and he kept talking. ‘Would you shut up! Ask him the time, he’ll tell you how to build a clock!’ But they so loved each other! I have seen grandparents tenderly raising the children their own sons and daughters abandoned. I have talked with parents of adult addicts, struggling to do their best for them. I have seen young parents lose infants and mourn in ways you could not imagine. I have been amazed that the scary, tattooed man in leather was all tears and kindness, no matter how he may have looked on the outside. I have met men and women who could have been on disability, but who worked on despite their frailty. I know physicians who give their all, at all hours of the day and night. Humans are capable of enormous love and compassion.

II And here’s the hard truth. Humans are wicked. Just last year I saw a man who had severely beaten a child. And he himself had been beaten in jail. Just last year, I saw a child beaten by his mother’s boyfriend. Every day, someone lies to me to receive prescription drugs. In fact, prescription drug abuse is a massive problem in America today, as people take pills and even sell the pills prescribed to them; all while getting state and federal assistance. Men and women routinely cheat on their spouses, become addicted to alcohol, drugs and pornography, and drive their vehicles illegally and while intoxicated. Humans lie, cheat, steal and do everything else imaginable to lower our expectations. And some of the worst wear expensive suits and speak perfect English. Do not be deceived by externals.
Love humans, but beware. They are, to paraphrase Pascal, ‘glorious and wretched.’

Kenneth embodied both. An old drunk, a mean drunk, a murderer who had served time in prison, he routinely came to the ER, as you might guess, drunk. He often threatened to kill us. He could have. He would often leave us, angry, and say ‘I’m going to get my shotgun and come back and kill you!’ I guess he just went home and fell asleep. He was loud and profane. Who knows how he ended up that way? But, in the midst of his anger, all we had to say was ‘Kenneth, there’s a baby in the next room, please be quiet!’ And he would apologize and weep. He could, and did, recite Shakespeare.

Money
I Medicine, work in general, is not only about money. Money cannot make you happy; money cannot provide the meaning you so desperately require in order to press on toward the goal to which you were called. Many of the least happy physicians I know make lots of money. Money compels many bad decisions, and many moral perils, in which men and women make bad decisions because of the lure of cash. The news is full of their stories. Bernie Madoff comes to mind. His money purchased jail-time.

II But money is not evil; the love of money is the root of evil. If you do your job well, you will deserve to be paid well. Compensation is appropriate, and the lack of fair compensation for work will kill a work ethic and productivity quicker than my children can start a brush fire. Never be ashamed of your skills, or of the desire to be paid for them. And always remember that money is payment for pieces of your life, which you carve out for the purpose of supporting yourself and your family. You need the money, and your employer needs your skill. They key is to have something someone needs, and to be willing to do what others don’t want to do, in places they don’t want to go. I have a great job in Seneca, because lots of people want to practice in LA.

Death

I Death is universal. It is the constant perspective of medicine: this realization that the grim reaper stands by our sides at all times. You are young. May God give you many long decades of life. But in the end, we will all exit the earth. I have seen a bunch of death and participated in quite a few deaths…I mean, as a doctor. I have watched aged men and women die slowly, holding hands. I’ve struggled in cardiac arrests, trying to save life. I have seen infants who died in their sleep. And I have seen young people, in the prime of life, die tragically from accidents, or from cancers that they never expected. We can delay it; so live healthy lives and don’t take unnecessary risks. But in the end, it gets us all. The death rate remains the same, my partner says: One per customer. It’s a useful cure for guilt to realize that no one avoids it forever.
I learned this most poignantly the night my partner was driving home and ran his car into a horse. He was killed, but before he died I had to help care for him, and face his family. Death even comes to doctors!

II Because this is so, life is precious. Moments are precious. Do not waste them. Use them in genuine pleasure, use them in love, use them to produce and create and leave behind a legacy of wonder. Television is not a productive use of your life; frankly, though I do it myself, neither is Facebook, Twitter, constant web-surfing or X-Box. (Though I someday hope to beat my children at HALO…if you don’t have ODST, go and try it!)

Someone once said, ‘as though one could kill time without wounding eternity.’ I have tried to live by that rule. And so, I struggle to use every minute well. A life in which death is certain should inspire you to fill up every breathing moment with something good. I hope to stand before God, exhausted because I was still moving forward when I died.

Broken

I Everyone is broken. Everyone is broken. Everyone is broken. Do I need to say it again? As Philo of Alexandria said two thousand years ago, ‘Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle.’ I have known so many people. The woman crying for her recently deceased husband. They angry young man going blind, bitter because he would never see his daughter with his earthly eyes. The brother of a man stabbed to death who punched the wall next to me. The woman constantly abused by her boyfriend, who just wanted a kind word. The man always afraid and paralyzed by anxiety. The woman who has come to our ER some 2000 times, literally, in the 16 years of my practice, because she is lonely within her marriage and just wants someone to talk with, in a place clean and bright. If you would be great, be kind. And show the broken that they are worthwhile.

II Everyone is worth fixing. No one is garbage. We might use the term ‘trailer trash,’ but it’s incorrect. No one is trash. Some are evil, some are deceitful, some are just bad. But inside each is a human soul of some potential, created in the image of God. Be careful not to judge too quickly. Be careful to show kindness. Remember that the drunk may have been ignored or abused by his parents. Remember that the addict may have been raped as a child. Remember that the angry may have lost his children to tragedy. Remember that the rude driver may just have learned that he lost his job, or his wife, or that his sister has cancer. Remember that we all have pain. And remember this:

Worth:

I Humans matter because they have intrinsic worth. This is a kind of grace; that we have worth not because of what we do, or who we are, but because we are! This is why I always took care of Larry no matter how drunk or crazy he was. See, in addition to being a drunk Larry was addicted, heart and soul, to pain pills. Once, stoned out of his brain and with a blood alcohol of 400, he said, ‘I have to go doc, and babysit my nephews!’ ‘What? Are you crazy?’ I said.
He was in the ER constantly. Something always hurt. I checked him, and decided if it seemed legitimate or not. Over and over again he visited, as he slowly, surely dissolved his own liver and finally died. Did he deserve it, from a human, utilitarian standpoint? No. But from a heavenly one, he did. And I never regretted it. Not even the times he told me ‘my brother stole my Lortab! Momma’s in the truck, you can go ask her!’ In the end, I came to really like him. I miss him, to this day.

II Humans have worth, so you have worth. Do not be used or abused by anyone. You are as entitled to happiness and safety as anyone else. I always wondered why that woman left the ER one night after caring for her sick, but very annoying mother, and then put gun to her head. I wonder if she felt she was worthwhile. I’m afraid she didn’t. But she was. She was infinitely valuable. Never doubt that you are an amazing creation, who has just scratched the surface of your potential, temporal and eternal.

Truth

I The truth is powerful. Do not neglect it out of convenience, even kindness; for it is a false kindness. I once 
confronted a patient and told her that she was a narcotic addict, that she needed to get help and get a job. She wasn’t happy with what I said. But about a year later she saw me, stopped me and thanked me for telling her the painful truth. She beat the drugs and had a job! I could have lied to her as she lied to herself. But that would have been crueler than anything I could have done!
II The truth requires gentility. ‘Am I going to die?’ people ask. Sometimes, the answer is yes. But the answer I give is, ‘We’ll do our best to keep you from dying!’ Sometimes, all anyone needs is a little bit of hope. Use the truth carefully when you give bad news; couch it in love and possibility.

Love

I Love your people fearlessly and recklessly. Give your time to those you love lavishly. Time is your most precious resource. Spoil your family, your siblings, your parents, your lovers, your spouses. Spoil them with time. A man who lost a teenage child to a car wreck, said to me ‘spoil them while you have them!’ Truer words were never spoken.

II Do not be deceived by any love that causes you to be or feel diminished. Love that is good enlarges you, so beware of anything less. Remember that, in the name of love, men use women and women use men. I see the results of their lies in abuse, in sexually transmitted diseases, in violence. Love is the most abused word on the planet. Guard your hearts, as the Bible says.

Family

I Family is paramount. Have one. And when you have one, fight to keep it. Children whose families are shattered struggle. They feel uncertain and alone in a frightening world. Sometimes, the parents of single mothers or fathers do ridiculous things, like taking the baby for a stroll at 1 am, or subjecting them to the violence of boyfriends and girlfriends. These children from chaotic homes look at me, even at age 2 or 3, and seem to say (with their eyes), ‘please take me home and put me to bed…these people I live with are nuts!’ Marriages that break up leave both parties divided, lonely, financially devastated and depressed.

II Do not be tricked. Crazy people make for difficult families. And by crazy, I mean out of control, dangerous, dramatic, unstable individuals. I’m not talking mental illness; I’m talking crazy. You all know someone who is crazy, don’t you?

Drama

I You are all young and passionate; those are wonderful traits. But avoid unnecessary drama. I see drama all the time. Try to remember that for most of the working, struggling world, drama is exhausting. I work in a Level I Drama Center, with a D. Couples fight, scream, call each other rude names, leave lewd messages, get divorced, shatter the quiet nights, take overdoses and talk about suicide, pretend to pass out and feign illnesses, only to get angry when I believe them and try to put them in the hospital. And that’s just the staff! Drama, manufactured drama, drama created out of boredom, is a distraction from unhappiness and often the evidence of a mind lacking creativity and purpose; or the appropriate fatigue of hard work. Live lives of meaning and purpose and you’ll have little time for drama.

Calling

I Calling is paramount. Find that thing that moves you. Frederich Buechner said: ‘Your true calling is the place where your deep gladness meets the world’s deep need.’ Let me say that again……
You have gifts of love and opportunity. So find the things you do best and use them for the good of the world. But don’t be surprised if your calling changes with the years, even your profession!
I began as a journalism student, became a physician, then became a writer once more. Who knows what will come next? I’ve been blessed to care for sick and dying people. And to write words that encouraged people, or made them laugh. These are great gifts; the gifts of following my calling. So, I urge you to work with all your hearts at what you love, and be open to what you will come to love next. Your skills and interests will change with the years, and so must your calling and work.

II Calling may have nothing to do with your job; your job may merely exist to support your calling. Your calling may be something you desire deeply; or something you have not yet even discovered. Be patient, but be persistent.

A few closing thoughts:

Finally, and more practically:
Avoid drunk people with chainsaws.
Do not look for dates in the emergency room waiting area.
NEVER keep a rattlesnake for a pet.
Take as few medications as possible. Especially for pain.
No one is attractive when they vomit after drinking too much.
Police officers have no sense of humor after 11 PM. They don’t even laugh at donut jokes!
Dogs do not enjoy being kissed on the mouth by intoxicated loud, aggressive individuals.
Hit the dog, hit the deer, but do not hit the oncoming vehicle.
If your friends want to ‘make a bomb,’ get the phone and prepare to call 911. Stay back a safe distance. Follow the donut rule.
Your parents were correct: nothing good happens after midnight. I’ve seen the aftermath.
Be wise in all you do.
Be compassionate.
Learn to love well.
Doctor or not, you’ll make the world better by loving. 
I dub you my interns; go forth and treat the world well!
Now, have a great day, and please try to stay out of the emergency room. It’s really not that interesting if you’re a patient!
God guide and bless each of you, today and always!

Edwin

Apr 5, 2012

ACLS | Awesome Class in Life Saving

Went to ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life Support) recently.
Have been wanting to update myself since ages ago.
Never seem to have the opportunity to do it.

Dr.L, the main pillar being it, had been 'harassing' me.
In the most civilized way.
I gave in finally.
It was for my own good.
More so, for the good of the patients under my care.

Not that I am the perfect clinician, unscarred by mistakes.
Yet, I do my best.
I am sure no one with the sane mind would declare themself error-free.
Yet, some chose to cast the first stone.

It is truly indefensible when a recent mortality was shrouded with mystery.
A mystery that its final stage, there was just lack of ACLS megacode resuscitation.
'Lack of facility' may be sent up the centrestage for ridicule and blame.
Yet, truth remains that humans should be responsible for the non-living objects.


In the course, Dr.L at a very particular moment, shared a harsh sentiment.
She was rejecting the instinctive explosives of scoldings during any resuscitation.
"You have to be calm and steady during resuscitation
Go over your megacode
Give clear instruction
Do not shout or scold if something went wrong,
Or someone gave you wrong instrument.
It falls back at you to put in a system to make sure everything being checked.
Everyone being trained.
You just waste time scolding.
And the relatives who hear you loud and clear won't be happy,too"
One can't really disagree with that logic.

As for the true lethal pathology that set to kill is largely unpredictable.
Nevertheless, the true survival rate in UK is 80% in 2010.
(Ref: GTG56 Maternal Collapse from www.rcog.org.uk.
Knight M, Tuffnell D, Brocklehurst P, Spark P, Kurinczuk JJ; UK
Obstetric Surveillance System. Obstet Gynecol 2010;115:910–7.)


Dr. L did remind everyone not to be overzealous and be more accepting.
If he or she is meant to die, they'll die, no matter how appropriate and timely your action is.
If he or she is meant to survive, they'll survive. But that doesn't mean you just let her/him die, ok?!?
The most important thing is that you being able to do the right thing and do your best.

Back to this ACLS course and exam.
Yup, again, I am in the guinea pig cohort.
This is the first time ACLS is shortening its 3-days course to 2 days.
Everything came hard and came fast. Like the chest compression.

The foreign ECG became familiar again.
And out of good luck or serendipity, I scored full in the ECG part.
Perhaps I underestimated my residual knowledge from my awesome undergrad Cardio Sifu, Dr Halmey.
Still in the ECG test, I had to chose 'sinus rhythm' after excluding all other ECG abnormalities.


Had an excellent tutor and partner in the Airway station.
Learning was a breeze.


Prep before advanced airway - intubation.
codename: MALES (right to left)


The distractor at the Airway station. It's called Laryngeal Tube. It resembles.. err... never mind.


MegaCode Exam with my colleagues, Dr.C and Dr. H. Sporting the 'LGE smile'.


The examiner was the awesome biker Dr.L.

Passing the short course was not my primary aim.
But still I'm glad I did it together with most of the participants.
This cohort set the record for having a high passing rate.
For those who didn't make it, it's TCA 2 months - May
Confirmed joining are at least 2 Consultants and a specialist my dearest Dept.

And it's "Staying Alive" all over again...


Franchised slides for the whole crash course is attached below.


P.S. Dear A, no, I'm so not going to share the lame 'rigor mortis' joke.