Monday, March 23, 2020

My Favorites

   In honor my my 26th birthday passing a few days ago, I figured I'd share something fun ๐Ÿ˜Š!

     Growing up, my mom LOVED making scrapbooks. It included pictures of old friends, school work, sports, and so many other memories for each year of my life. Yes, there are many embarrassing photos that exist that I won't be posting today ๐Ÿ˜…. But the effort that went into creating these scrapbooks is incredible and I'm so happy my mom spent the time to make them. I wish I was able to share them with you, but this was before the digital age and everything in these books was hand-cut, hand-made, meticulously crafted on paper and placed into a binder.

     Each birthday my mom asked us to fill out a list of our favorites things for the last year. This year, I thought it would be fun if I found an old list and compared that to my favorite things today! To see how I have changes, and also to see how much things around me have changed. I made this new list blind, not reading my year "8" list initially, so I could have some fun comparing the final results!

     For those who knew me as a kid, I've grown up A LOT!! Since I was 8 years old, my career goals have changed, inflation hit hard, but everyone knows my favorite singer has always been T. Swift! The Backstreet Boys phase was only due to growing up with two older sisters and never getting to control the music, I swear...  My career choice change countless times until I settled on becoming a PA-C. I love who I have become and I am truly blessed.

     I'm curious if any of your parents did this growing up, let me know! How have you changed over the last couple decades? I was living in Louisville, KY when I was 8 and had just recently moved from Alaska.  My biggest concern was perfecting my Taekwondo and playing Super Smash Brothers. At age 26, I am a full-fledged Physician Assistant working in Spartanburg, SC in foot/ankle reconstruction and orthopaedic trauma surgery. I still love playing Super Smash Bros when I get the chance, so I haven't changed too much!


          Age 8                        
          Age 26                          

Favorite Colors
Red, White & Blue
Red & Black
Favorite Dinner
Lasagna
Chicken & waffles
Favorite Treat
Donuts
Ice Cream
Favorite Book
Magic School Bus
My textbooks….
Favorite Movie
Pokรฉmon 3
Fight Club
Favorite Stuffed Animal
Teddy bear
CJ, my childhood teddy bear
Favorite Animal
Grizzly bear
Dogs
Favorite Activity
Arcade
Working out
Favorite Thing to do with Mom
Play games
Talks about life
Favorite Thing to do with Dad
Go out to a baseball game
Hike/Travel
What I want for Christmas
Scooter & skateboard
To have my family together in one place
What I want to be when I Grow Up
Teacher
A PA-C, then a Senator
What I would buy with $100
A new Gameboy advance
a % of my rent
What I’m Thankful for
Jesus & God
Everything in my life
Who do you Love
My Family
ELE; everybody love everybody
Best Quality
Tae Kwan Do
Always willing to help
Worst Quality
Jump spin heel kicks
Speaking before thinking
Favorite Singer
Backstreet Boys
Taylor Swift
Favorite Song
Bye bye bye
Piano Man

- **IMPORTANT NOTE: I'm still no good at jump spin heel kicks**

Love y'all, stay safe out there!!

Monday, February 10, 2020

How to Study in PA School

     Everyone knows that PA school can be one of the most stressful times in your life, but it can also be the most rewarding.  The key is to try and find a work-life balance (easier said than done, I know)!  You spend all day on a clinical rotation, come home to study for the EOR (end-of-rotation) exam, complete the assignments for that rotation, and then you have to try and find time to eat... all this while still trying to prepare to the PANCE!  It can seem overwhelming at times ๐Ÿ˜“.  Hopefully I can ease your conscious some by providing some resources you can pull from to aid your current study habits.

     My classmates always knew I was "extra" when it came to studying.  I enjoy making study guides, printing them out, and then handwriting notes on top of them.  All while jamming to the Halo soundtrack; Michael Salvatori was my #3 Spotify artist of 2019 behind NF and Taylor Swift.  While this worked for ME it may not be a method in which you feel you can succeed.  There are COUNTLESS options available to help you succeed for your EOR examinations, and eventually the PANCE.  Options both myself and fellow University of Kentucky classmates utilized, included:
  1. Paid subscription courses from Rosh Review or HIPPO Education
    1. These sites provide sample questions, study guides, video education and more!
      1. *you can share an account login, but you didn't hear this from me*
  2. Educational video through my BOY, Dustyn Williams at Online MedEd, or otherwise.
    1. This man has helped me with so much.
  3. Texts such as CMDT (Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment) 2020"The Green Book", or PANCE Prep Pearls
    1. CMDT was my go-to, but it definitely isn't the most user-friendly textbook.
  4. The University of Kentucky had access to UpToDate, which was a game changer!  They also has access to various literature review sites as well.
    1. This was probably my BIGGEST resource in PA school.  Having quick access to the most current information on my computer or smartphone.
  5. Lastly my personal study guides found here at PA School Study Stuff.  I hope you can find them helpful!!
    1. These are based on the EOR guidelines for each rotation: Internal Medicine, Family Medicine, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Women's Health, Emergency Medicine and General Surgery.
    2. The study guides are a mix of all the resources found above and all credit goes to the original authors and publishers.
     As an indicator of performance, I did well on each EOR exam, finishing above the national average on all but 1 exam.  I then passed the PANCE on my 1st attempt with room to spare!  I hope this information helps.  Please feel free to reach out to me with any questions concerning PA school.  I would be more than happy to help you in your journey to PA school, during PA school, or beginning your job search!

You'll make it through, I promise!  You'll walk across that stage, same as I did.  I just know it!


Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Trauma Surgery & Orthopaedic Trauma Surgery

POP QUIZ: What nerve must you watch out for when performing an anterior-approached ORIF of the lateral malleolus? And what would happen if you were to dissect this nerve?

     My 10th rotation (of 12 total) consisted of a mixture of trauma surgery and orthopaedic trauma surgeryDuring our PA school clinical rotations at the University of Kentucky, we get the opportunity to pursue two separate "elective" rotations in fields we are interested in. I spent the first two weeks of the rotation with the trauma surgery team and the second two weeks with the orthopaedic trauma surgery team. I chose these fields due to my background and future interest in orthopaedics, specifically in a trauma setting. I got to be part of both of these teams at a level one trauma center.

     While both fields are related to trauma, they manage very different aspects of the patient. Trauma surgery is a sub-specialty of general surgery while orthopaedic trauma surgery is a sub-specialty of orthopaedics. A trauma surgeon and team manages extensive damage to various body tissues and organ systems while the orthopaedic trauma surgeon and team manages the bones, joints, ligaments and tendons related to the trauma. The trauma team typically consults with the orthopaedic team to manage related musculoskeletal injuries.

     As a part of the trauma surgery team, I was a member of morning conference at 5:45am where we discussed any patients that came during the overnight shift. We then broke into our teams (A, B, C, ICU) and rounded on our patients to see what needed to be done throughout the day.  I was assigned two or three patients each day and was responsible for their care, including notes, orders, consults, and a member of the operating team if necessary. I then presented the patients to my preceptor along with my assessment and plan. Days were typically 12 hours, with 3-day weeks.

     Some interesting things I got to see/do with the trauma surgery team:
  • I was able to participate in a "trauma alert red" (highest level trauma at our facility) where the patient coded. I was 2nd in line to perform chest compressions, and the patient was able to achieve ROSC rather quickly. Their FAST exam was negative and the patient was stable on mechanical ventilation. 
  • I saw a patient follow-up at the clinic s/p surgical debridement from Fournier's gangrene secondary to a perirectal abscess. This was his first follow up and he had extensive skin debridement including portions of his penis and the removal of his entire scrotum... I was not part of his surgery, but that does NOT sound fun.

     I then spent some time with the orthopaedic trauma surgery team which consisted of the operating room three days per week and one day of outpatient clinic. The surgical team consisted of the attending physician, a fellow, and myself. We would arrive around 6:00am to round on patients we consult with. We would then visit pre-op to visit the patient as they prepared for surgery. We then performed the required orthopaedic surgery, and visited with the patient and family post-op once the patient was conscious after sedation wore off. Days ranged from 10 hours to 14 hours, 4 days per week.

     Some interesting things I got to see/do with the orthopaedic trauma surgery team:
  • A patient presented with a fractured humerus due to an MVC. Upon opening her arm for ORIF plate-fixation, we saw what looked to be cancerous bone. We sent samples to pathology, and her fracture was a result of a weakened humerus due to adenocarcinoma that metastasized from her lung.
  • I got to use the mallet and adjust an intermedullary nail. I didn't get to actually hammer in the nail, I simply made some minor adjustments to ensure proper placement. However, that still took some good whacks. Orthopaedics is like wood-working... power drills, screws, nails, plates, it's such a unique and precise surgical field!
     Follow this link to the University of Kentucky Trauma Blog if you have any interest in current trauma care/management: http://uktraumaprotocol.blogspot.com/
     If you have any interest in orthopaedics, I LOVED this resource: https://www.orthobullets.com/

POP QUIZ ANSWER: The superficial peroneal nerve, located just anterior to the lateral malleolus. If dissected, you would lose sensation to the dorsum of the foot. You would NOT lose and eversion due to being past the point of muscular innervation.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Motivation

"If you don't work for what you want you will end up with something that you don't want. If you don't work for what you want, you will most likely work for someone who did! Someone you don't want to work for."

     I heard this quote a while back and it continues to stick with me every day! How true this is and how motivating these few lines are. Life is hard and it will knock you down, but it's hard for everyone, so get up and GRIND! (Grindin' ← favorite song*) You have to be willing to put in the extra effort in order to truly be successful. If you don't, someone else is willing to and you will end up not being as successful as the person who was willing to do more. The one willing to sacrifice more, the one willing to study more, willing to lose sleep, the one who didn't go out and party every weekend, didn't binge-watch the next Netflix series, the one who pushed through the challenges and hardships in the pursuit of their dream. What is your dream? Where do you want to be? What do you want to be? Who do you want to be?


     My daily routine for this rotation is being at the clinic from 8:00am until ~5:00pm, I leave the clinic and hit the gym. I finally end up at home around 6:30pm, eat dinner, and then try and study. My days are busy, so it's hard to stay motivated and focused! After each workout session, I love to sit in the steam room for about 10 minutes and just relax/decompress. To sweat out all the toxic thoughts and negative emotions from the day. I put on the "Fearless Motivation" playlist on Spotify and listen to a few speeches while I relax. I use this time to reflect on my day. To examine what I could have and should have done that day along with what I need to get done before day's end. I dissect the reasons I didn't accomplish them, and makes plans/goals on how I can improve tomorrow to reach my goals.

     This approach may not be motivating to you, but there are plenty of other options to help keep your life on track. Prayer & religion, planning & goal-setting, cellphone reminders, etc... The most important thing is to just stay on track, and get done what you need to get done to get where you want to go (Yes, I know that was extremely well-said ๐Ÿ˜…). "The Road to There" has to end up somewhere, so make it where you'd like to end up. Just like a GPS, you have a destination set and you decide which route you to take. I recommend avoiding the road blocks and u-turns!

     Just realize this... You can't sit at work all day, working for someone else only to come home and not work on yourself. Work each day on something to improve yourself. Whether it be health, fitness, education, business, a new idea, your next investment, or whatever it may be. Don't spend your days only working for someone else, you'll fail to realize your own potential and your own worth!

Monday, October 22, 2018

Internal Medicine Clinical Rotation

POP QUIZ: What is the only lipid-lowering medication class not contraindicated in pregnancy?

     For Internal Medicine, our program has two, four-week rotations. While it's ideal that we do both rotations at the same clinic, that's not always an option. I was at a Cardiology clinic for my 1st rotation, and I was at an out-patient primary care clinic for my 2nd rotation! I did not think I would enjoy primary care as much as I did, but I saw something new/interesting every day!

     As a provider at an out-patient internal medicine clinic, you are the patient's go-to for healthcare and also the "middle-man" between the patient's various doctors. If a patient has numerous medical conditions (i.e. congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, osteoarthritis), you are to ensure they are being referred to/seen and treated by their Cardiologist, Pulmonologist, Orthopedist, and so on. You also see the patient for annual physicals, acute illnesses, chronic medical problems, lab work, medication adjustments and so much more! 


     As a primary care provider, it's important to build a positive rapport with your patients. I noticed very quickly how much my physician's patients meant to him, and how well-respected he was by patients. He cared for each patient as an individual, helping them with medical problems as well as life in general. He has gone on mission trips with his patients, long-distance bike marathons with others, and even attended events/parties when his patients asked him to join. As a medical provider it's important to always remember that you are treating people; people with emotions, feelings, concerns, stressors, and anything else you can think of. Compassion is the best way to develop a positive rapport with patients. Studies actually show that patient overall health and disease outcomes are linked to a better patient-provider relationship.


     We had a couple of very interesting patients that came into the clinic...
  • Female that was born with esophageal atresia and developed a fistula. For treatment, they took a portion of her jejunum and made a new esophagus that ran on top of her sternum. Looked WILD.
  • Male patient with hypokalemia that says he drinks 2-3..... POTS of coffee each day. Does anyone else drink that much coffee!?
  • Male that has debilitating headaches with orgasm, recent-onset.
     We have assignments that we do for the class portion of rotations, and one of those assignments is to type up a SOAP (subjective, objective, assessment, plan) note on a patient that we saw in clinic. For those interested in the male patient that has headaches with orgasm or if you want to see how a provider's clinic note is typically typed up, CLICK HERE (*please note: all HIPAA standards have been followed)

     Our program uses PAEA Exams, and they post a topic list and blueprint for each exam. Below are those categories if you want to see what we are responsible for (the IM topic list is a unreal):
 Books that helped me ROCK this exam include (the latter two are books for all PANCE topics, not just IM):

POP QUIZ ANSWER: Bile Acid Sequestrants (cholestyramine, colestipol, and colesevelam)
Be sure to monitor fat-soluble vitamin levels as these drugs may impede their absorption

Monday, October 8, 2018

Regret

QUESTION: What is your biggest regret?

     I hear so many people say, "I regret not doing this" or "I regret not doing that." How many people do you know regret something they they have done? I hear that so few times that I'd be lying if I said I could count on two hands. I'm personally of the mind set to trying everything. You want to try out for the local baseball team? Train, and try out. You want to become a doctor? Study, and apply to med school. You want to date that person you think is out of your league!? Ask, they just might feel the same way... Try everything! And even though you might not succeed initially, you CAN do it and you WILL do it if it's what you truly want to do.
     There was a video I saw on YouTube where they had a giant chalkboard, and at the top "Write your Biggest Regret..." People began populating the wall with things their regrets; not pursuing their dream, not asking that girl/boy out, not taking that extra step to reach their goal, not applying to their dream school, not ______, you can fill in the blank. Not a single person wrote something on that wall that they regretted actually doing.


     My grandfather shared a quote with me... While humorous, it hits the nail on the head. "It's better to reach for the stars and land on the moon than to reach for the top of the haystack and land in the dirt." Pursue your dreams! You will regret it more if you don't try.

My Biggest Regret: The mental stress I placed on my family growing up. Love you guys!

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Family Medicine Clinical Rotation

POP QUIZ: What's the most common cause of chest pain?

     For Family Medicine, our program has two four-week rotations. While it's ideal that we do both rotations at the same clinic, that's not always an option. I am at an Urgent Care clinic for my 1st rotation, and I'll be at a Family Practice Clinic for my 2nd rotation in the Spring semester.

     At the Urgent Care, you see a wide variety of age groups and complaints. From infants a month old to a 98-year-old woman (yes, you read that correctly) who's more active than I am!! It's much more fast-paced than traditional family medicine, and you don't get to focus much on the preventative side of medicine. A patient comes in with a complaint, you diagnose the complaint, and you treat the complaint. It's a "greet em, treat em & street em" way of  looking at medicine.

     Common complaints/diagnoses I saw while working:
  • streptococcal pharyngitis (strep throat), influenza A&B, upper respiratory viruses, seasonal allergies, chronic bronchitis exacerbations, depression, cuts/scrapes, and orthopaedic injuries (my personal favorite!).



     I got to have a little fun at the office for college football opening day! Yes, I am based in Lexington at the University of Kentucky and do most of my rotations in Wildcat Country, but I will always be a Georgia Bulldawg at heart. I got some flak for wearing this to the clinic, but I was born in GA and went to undergrad there! I will always support the Kentucky Wildcats.....except when they play the Dawgs! #GoDawgs





     I did learn an interesting new technique for wound care, that I'd personally never seen before! It was actually for the 98-year-old mentioned earlier who injured herself while tending to her garden! When dealing with scrapes, try use as much of the patient's leftover skin to cover the wound. The BEST band-aid is your own skin, so we spent plenty of time trying to cover up the patient's wound with her own skin and then using steri-strips to hold it in place before dealing with the remaining open wound. This took plenty of patience as the scraped skin loves to roll up on itself! It's best with two sterile cotton swabs and some normal saline. Use one of the cotton swabs underneath the skin and twist the swab away from you to help unroll the skin before placing down to cover the wound. This ensures the most amount of skin possible is being used to cover the wound. It was definitely an interesting approach to wound care I'd never seen before, but it makes so much sense!! So if you have a big wound, try NOT picking off the skin before getting seen by a medical professional.

     Our program uses PAEA Exams, and they post a topic list and blueprint for each exam. Below are those categories if you want to see what we are responsible for (the FM topic list is a beast):
     Books that helped me ROCK this exam include (the latter two are books for all PANCE topics, not just FM):

POP QUIZ ANSWER: Chest wall pain, AKA muscle soreness.
Characterized by at least 2 of the following: Localized muscle tension; Stinging pain; Pain is reproducible by palpation; Absence of cough.