Tuesday, April 21, 2020

5 Qualities of a Successful Emergency Physician


O. John Ma, MD
An emergency physician is a person who takes care of patients at the emergency department or is someone who takes charge of contingency situations and management of other life-threatening cases. His responsibility is to provide immediate recognition, evaluation, care, and stabilization. Well, there is no evidence-based literature that would guide you to those 5 habits and qualities but most of the information provided and gathered is from the right sources and experienced Emergency Physicians. To deal with everyday unforeseen events at the hospital and successfully treating patients by seeking their ease and well-being all you need are the following tips.

Complete your sleeping hours:

With so much workload, mental stress and working overnight shifts sleep patterns might be disturbed causing Circadian Disruption (CR) and sleep deprivation. To ensure a patient's well-being you need to look after your mental as well as physical health. Having a good sleep helps to manage stress and multitask.

Prevent substance abuse:

Working all day long in the emergency department might cause a lot of stress and depression. Studies have shown that EM Physicians have been rated 3 times greater involvement in substance abuse than physicians from other specialties. This underlying cause of substance abuse affects the performance of a doctor resulting in negligence of the patient's health.

Focus on self-reporting:

Make a to-do list for your daily tasks in the emergency department and mark your performance alongside each task. This will help you to access your progress, identify problems early and gauging your patient's recovery making you more attentive and focus at your work. This self-reporting mechanism will ultimately lead to patient's satisfaction, increasing your prestige at the emergency department.

Don't let the fear of litigation overtakes you:

The threat of litigation affects clinical practice, diagnostic tests ordered and patient disposition decisions. The best way to deal is to acknowledge the risk and take savvy steps to reduce it by complying with safe patient care standards that are in the patient's best interest and ethically precise.

Exercise safety measures and universal precautions:

When you are working in the emergency department you are most exposed to infectious and life-threatening diseases. Before patients' safety and health, an emergency physician should exercise safety measures necessary to prevent exposure to blood and other body fluids. Conforming to adequate space, equipment and preparation would reduce the chances of accidental exposure.

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