Wednesday, March 21, 2007

The Cranial Screw-Top

The famous Neurosurgeon Dr. Hfuhruhurr pioneered the Cranial Screw-Top Method of brain transplantation. Unfortunately for us he took his skills to the grave.

Right now I have two patients and three family members in the ED in need of STAT brain-transplantation. It's not just me. My nurse warned me about one of these patients before going into the room. She was discharged from the nearby University hospital yesterday. She has been seen in this ED 8 times in the last month and admitted once. She has a somatiform disorder meaning that every kind of specialist available has studied her from stem to stern and found no reason for her complaints. A psychiatrist also was consulted during her last admission and solved the puzzle. This woman has such severe depression, poor insight, and poor coping skills that her depression is manifested with physical symptoms and complaints.

It does not help that she will not take her prescribed anti-depressant as it is too expensive. It does not help that she smokes pot and crack (evidently not that expensive). She came in here today faking a coma and telling me that she had not been able to keep anything down in two weeks. When asked why she didn't see her primary care provider today she told me it was because she would have to pay for it and that she shouldn't have to pay and that we were free.

This patient would be at the top of the list for the good Dr. Hfuhruhurr. A monkey brain would be better than hers. Again, this was a statement offered by her nurse with which I readily agreed. Her bill today will be in the multi thousands of dollars. Thanks, taxpayers, for footing it. To learn more about Dr. Hfuhruhurr click the title to this post above.

13 comments:

  1. Had one of those recently. 61 visits in a little under 3 years. WOW. Her bills were in the millions. Oh yeah, she was not a millionaire.

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  2. Out of the 80 people I triaged today, I would say that at least 50% of them had been seen in the last 3 days! Crazy People!

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  3. If this is ignorant, please excuse me:

    I thought EMTALA only required the treatment of emergency cases. This woman seems fine. She claims to have "non-emergency" symptoms that you can't recreate in the ED. Why would you treat her without getting her to front the cash. ED's are for emergencies, correct? Tell her to hit the road.

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  4. ah, good question. EMATAL does not define "emergency condition". so, we are obligated to err on the side of safety. this patient looked sick and we all thought she was FOS, BUT, every once in a while these patients are sick. it's the whole "boy who cried wolf" syndrome. i would rather work these patients up completely than be hauled into court for an EMTALA violation or a missed diagnosis.

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  5. i guess an easier way to say it is that we have to prove, every time, that she does not have an "emergency condition".

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  6. Speaking of which brain to use, remember that brain from "Abby Normal" in the movie "Young Frankenstein"? Heh!

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  7. ah yes. the famous dr. froederich frankenstein. i do not think he ever got to work with dr. hfuhruhurr though i'm sure they would have been fast friends.

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  8. agree with justin... kick her to the curb. BTW, Anne Uumellmahaye says 'Hi'.

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  9. "Ladies and gentlemen, I can envision a day when the brains of brilliant men can be kept alive in the bodies of dumb people."

    -Dr. Michael Hfuhruhurr

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  10. "She came in here today faking a coma...."

    Are you serious? I mean, I've seen faking syncope, but a coma?

    Had she supposedly just arisen from the coma, and found the strength to bless you with her presence?

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  11. no, she was brought in by her family for being 'unresponsive' but had normal vitals, reflexes, etc... the nurses, before i saw her, waved a little ammonia capsule under her nose and she 'woke up'. some do not approve of the use of ammonia capsules but they work when you are faking it.

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  12. Thank you for the clarification.

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  13. I saw a woman the other day who faked a seizure by twitching her upper body and saying quite clearly "I'm having a seizure, helpmehelpme!" This oh so wonderful phrase alternated with the classic "I can't breathe" that was screamed between gasping breaths.

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