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When you are a patient in a busy ED, getting your doctor’s best effort in caring for you can be difficult.  Most ED physicians only have a couple of minutes to obtain their history and physical exam.  It is increasingly important for you to stand out from the crowd by making the ED physician as confused and uncomfortable as possible so that they may give you their full and undivided attention and minimize the risk of medical errors.

emergency physicianSimply follow these 15 guidelines to ensure that your ED physician will experience some combination of bafflement, frustration, and anxiety.  Soon, you will be well on your way to mistake-free treatment bliss:

  • Complain of feeling “dizzy.”  When asked to clarify, state that you are “lightheaded.”  When asked to further clarify, state you are “dizzy.”  Continue in this manner until your physician gives up and admits you.
  • When asked if you smoke, state “No.”  When asked if you previously smoked, say “Yes.”  When asked when you quit, say “30 minutes ago.”
  • Describe the time course of all of your complaints as “a good while.”  Refuse to elaborate.
  • Insist on always being given regular strength Tylenol for your chronic pain.  Refuse everything else.
  • Place a sufficient amount of your non-edible belongings in a fast food bag.  Then check in with abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting while conspicuously holding the bag.
  • If you are female, complain of pelvic pain.  Refuse a pelvic exam.  Insist on a rectal exam.
  • Ask your attending emergency physician what they plan on specializing in when they finish their training.
  • Complain of having so much diarrhea for the last 2 days that you couldn’t even get off the toilet long enough to fill a glass with water.  While in the ER, be unable to provide a stool sample no matter how long you are there.  Get mad when you don’t have a diagnosis for your diarrhea.
  • Have a friend open a laptop or tablet to “healthgrades.com.”  Make it obvious that the doctor can see the screen.  Have your friend ask the doctor to repeat his or her name and type it into the form.  Occasionally during the interview, have your friend look at the doctor, sigh, and start typing.
  • Insist you have an allergy to a random antibiotic stating the allergy is that you are uncomfortable around pink, white, and brown pills.
  • Check in with altered mental status and lethargy.  Have friends confirm you are not at baseline.  Allow the entire physical exam to occur while acting sleepy, refusing to talk, or follow commands.  When the doctor is walking out the door, ask politely if you could have a turkey sandwich.
  • Insist on being admitted to a non-private room.  Demand a roommate who is at least 5’9″, has black hair, weighs between 200 and 230 lbs, has brown eyes and a penchant for rice cakes.
  • Put some chocolate pudding into a sterile emesis basin.  Place the basin inside an empty bedside commode.  Proceed to eat the pudding out of the commode as your doctor is walking in.
  • Insist on having your physician call each specialist who cares for you for your various conditions.  Insist that a physician admit you for a condition outside of their specialty.
  • Complain of chest pain.  When asked where your pain is, point to your groin.

If you enjoyed this article, please check out the author’s website First World Emergency Medicine for other great articles.

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Milli of Dilli
After picking up the basics of medicine by watching TV shows, I moved to LA, forged a medical school diploma, and somehow found some success in the late 80’s as an event physician for major Hollywood events. However, it all came crashing down while working the 1990 Grammy awards. While “Girl You Know it’s True” was being played live, a stagehand went into cardiac arrest and I was called upon to help. Unfortunately, as I tried to lip-sync CPR instructions, the speaker on my cassette player stopped working and I was exposed for a fraud. After serving time in prison, I went to medical school and residency and I finished training to become an Emergency Medicine physician. Instead of using this training and knowledge for good, I decided to abuse it to become a professional drug seeker. Armed with advanced medical knowledge, my quest remains to go from ED to ED searching out the drug seeker’s Holy Grail: syringes filled with 1mg of hydromorphone, the so-called “Milli of Dilli.” While I am not drug seeking, I have decided to write medical satire posing as a typical First World emergency physician. My website, with my other satirical articles that did not make it into Gomerblog, can be found at http://www.firstworldem.com and my twitter handle is @firstworldem
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