The Personality of a Hospital

The Personality of a Hospital

The first hospital I worked in after residency was an academic medical center.  It was a hospital located just outside the city limits of a major metropolis that held at least 10 large hospitals, ranging from community to research-oriented, teaching and non-teaching, university-affiliated and non-university affiliated.  There were other hospitals, too, small and medium, specialty, for veterans or native people, etc, etc.  The reason I make all of these distinctions?  They all have different feels, different personalities.  
Now, an academic (or university-affiliated) hospital typically employs a lot of teachers, researchers, and learners.  They teem with teams that are about the size of a junior varsity basketball team, many times clogging the hallways outside of patient rooms or crowded around a computer at the nurses’ station.  All are clamoring for understanding and knowledge of not only diseases and medicine but also of approaches and behaviors.  

I grew up in a small, rural town (population ~ 10,000) and never really knew if I would leave it, but as I progressed through my education, the collective ambition of my encouragers propelled me to see more than what my small town or state could offer.  Away I went to one of America’s 5 largest cities.  Of course there were cultural, economic, and atmospheric differences, but I was up to the challenge.  What does “up to the challenge” even mean, anyways?  Must one be successful at the challenge or just blissfully ignorant of the difficulties that lie ahead?

Aside from the personality of a city, I was excited for the bustling nature of a self-contained powerhouse that makes up an academic medical center.  I generally expected to be intimidated just by being there—not many people with an education have an inferiority complex, but I did.  I do.  There were commanding people, knowledgeable people, good teachers, condescending professionals, good attitudes, and bad attitudes.  This is everywhere though.  

My naiveté, that I would be embraced and utilized to the very limits of my professional knowledge, training, and expertise was quickly injured.  I didn’t give up, though.  I was told I’d have to prove myself, make myself an asset that they would soon see they could not live without.  The thing about academic medical centers, knowledge and expertise are commonplace.  I was commonplace.  I was disposable.  I was also young and not as experienced.  It showed, I’m sure.  The truth was that what I offered wasn’t appreciated, to put it politely. 

Perhaps I could win on a social level.  I learned and begrudgingly accepted that it’s not really what you know; it’s who you know.  And it’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.  I chose to say it with donut holes.  That worked for the few hours we were in rounds and maybe for a few precious minutes when I had to page the resident later to give a recommendation on a patient, but it was fleeting.

Every day when I ventured across the hospital to a meeting, to the cafeteria for lunch, or to the coffee stand for an afternoon break, I’d cross paths with the physicians I’d rounded with that morning.  My hopeful eyes would search for contact, I’d prepare my smile and turn my head slightly in their direction…but nothing.  No acknowledgement.  We’d be the only two people in the hallway for 40 or 50 feet, and their eyes that were once straight ahead, searched the floor.  I clearly had done something wrong, I hadn’t charmed them, hadn’t impressed them with my expertise.  My clothes weren’t fancy enough, my sense of humor wasn’t funny enough, I wasn’t pretty enough. 

It took me a long time to figure it out.  Some of my colleagues were more successful at crossing the invisible line.  They had traits that were deemed more attractive or at least local.  I was an alien.  I didn’t belong.  I began to accept it.  At some point I became more confident in my professional abilities and started not to care as much.  I had surpassed the limits of knowledge and had gained experience that none of the residents and many of the attending physicians had.  I vacillated between bitterness and graciousness when considering their snubbing of me.      

Alas, the time had come for me to move on.  Things always have a way of working out for me at the right time, after a lesson has been learned or the next situation has been readied.  After a small, but very meaningful pit stop, my home started calling.  A job back in my home state, the only position I would have accepted, came open.  It was time for a new personality.

The new hospital I went to had a simple rule for its employees:  Make eye contact and say ‘hello’.  I was no longer an alien.  Everyone smiles and is helpful.  It’s not a large, academic medical center, but it is a teaching hospital.  I don’t have to bribe people with sugar anymore.  In fact the food I brought in the early days didn’t impress anyone, but I didn’t need it to attain a level of respect and acceptance.  Acceptance both as a professional and as a person came simply because I was there, doing my job.  I won’t discount my earlier job because it did teach me.  It provided me an invaluable experience.      

Comparing and contrasting the two hospitals is a ready-made tale of the golden rule and loving your neighbor.  Both hospitals are affiliated with the same religious order—both have a motto that implores its professionals to heal and to treat others, both their body and spirit, as Jesus did.  I laugh at the torture I endured, tearing myself apart and doubting my abilities, my personality, and my looks, when it wasn’t my personality that needed inspection.  

The personality of a hospital has many influencers–the people, the administration, the culture of the surrounding people.  My personality was influenced by the first hospital, and my life suffered.  I had to learn to be myself again and what God intended for me, and eventually, the right hospital found me.    

White Coat Nuttiness & Dental Care

White Coat Nuttiness & Dental Care

When I was in pharmacy school, we learned and were subsequently certified to take blood pressure–the precise way to take blood pressure.  It’s a two-fold method, where you have to pump up the cuff two different times and noting when the pulse disappears and reappears on the first go.  Really, it’s long and complicated, and there are shortcuts, but this was a) school and b) pharmacy school, where we’re taught to check, recheck, and be as accurate as possible by adhering to systematic processes at the outset.  It’s no wonder I border on obsessive precision disorder.

When I settled into a new town at about 10 years into my career, I decided to establish care with a physician.  I was relatively young and didn’t have any major problems, but it’s still a good idea.  The nurse checking me in took my blood pressure.  It was elevated above the point where you need to treat it.  For me though, it was way higher than it had ever been.  In school when we practiced taking each other’s blood pressure, mine was typically around 100/70.  How could it be so high now?  Sure, I had gained weight since then and had just left a very stressful job in search for a more balanced existence, but I had also started running, losing weight, and eating better.  My physician and I agreed to just keep an eye on it and get a home blood pressure monitor.  Okay, check.  Follow-up in 6 months….  Umm, we’ll see.  I’m not a good follower-upper where my own health is concerned.

Several months later I went to the dentist. With adults I guess they take more precautions.  I admit it had been about 7 years since my last dental appointment.  They took my blood pressure.  It was high!  More than a little high.  Almost stroke range high.  Seriously?  I had been checking at home, and it was what I expected–120s/80s and lower especially right after a cardio workout.  The answer had been confirmed for me.  Yes, I had White Coat Hypertension.1

Well, the dentist, a seemingly caring man about my age, asked me about my life, stresses, hobbies, etc.  I thought he was just trying to get to know me and calm me down, but, no.  He was gearing up to give me advice on my blood pressure because he would not be able to work on me with it that high.  Yes, stress can do a lot of bad things, but he proceeds to tell me a good way to handle stress is exercise.  Did he not just hear me tell him that I ran a half-marathon a few months ago?!  I exercise.  Furthermore, I know these things. I’m in the healthcare biz.

I followed up with my physician a few weeks later to tell him the saga.  I brought my home machine and showed him my numbers, including the one I took right after the dental visit because my blood pressure had stayed elevated for 2 hours afterward.  Typical for WCH. We agreed, yes, it’s White Coat Hypertension (read: you get really, really anxious at dr’s offices, and your adrenaline starts pumping), and perhaps something should be done.  At work I spend my entire day around white coats.  I work in a hospital.  With physicians, nurses, pharmacists, mid-level practitioners, etc.  How could I have this White Coat Nuttiness?

It’s simple.  I’m human.  I’m afraid of being judged, evaluated, criticized.  I had done all the right things by changing my job, my lifestyle, my diet, my weight.  I’m still afraid of someone discovering a disease, uncovering an ugly truth, shining a light on something inside that I don’t want to know.

Well, the result?  I got a prescription for a blood pressure pill.  Regardless of the cause of my hard-pounding vessels, that trauma to my vasculature and vital organs will eventually lead to badness.  Treatment. Prevention.   …but I have yet to return to the dentist.  Bad patient.

  1. Shimbo D, Abdalla M ,Falzon L, Townsend R, Muntner P. Role of Ambulatory and Home Blood Pressure Monitoring in Clinical Practice: A Narrative Review. Ann Intern Med. 163(9):691-700.

Welcome to Puppygeddon

Welcome to Puppygeddon

A text then a ringing doorbell did not send me into panic as it normally does.  The house and my self were a mess.  Technically, I was clean. I did shower and brush my teeth that day, but the absence of makeup and a frizzy topknot contradicted any attempt to impress.  This was in contrast to my house.  The floor hadn’t been swept in nearly 2 months. Dust accumulated everywhere.  Even worse, though, was just the clutter.  Remnants of dog toys and shed fur blanketed the carpet.   Fur would line my socks if I chose not to wear shoes while walking through the house.  When my guests walked in, I saw their eyes widen and jaw slightly drop.  “Welcome to Puppygeddon!” I said sarcastically, to set the mood and their expectations for comfort.  “You should see the backyard.”

Oh, puppies.  This was my second but the first one in my own house.  New carpet. Mortgage. Nice furniture. You get the picture.  My first beast, A, is 5 & ½ years old, and I raised her from 9 weeks old in a third-floor apartment.  Imagine carrying that now 90-lb creature as a 3-month old puppy up and down 3 flights of stairs 5 or 6 times a day, only to have her poop on the carpet despite just having roamed the miniature lawn at the foot of the stairs.  This puppy, W, is 6 or 7 months old, and I’ve only had him a month.  He’s house-trained for bowel purposes, and he is much smarter than A ever was…but he is still a puppy.

The world is his playground, and he explores it with his mouth.  When A was a puppy, she did this too, but the carpet was old, the furniture was to be donated at the next move, and the digs were rented.  She taught me a lot about what to expect, but Puppy W is a disrupter.  I had to recalibrate and puppy-proof the house.  His propensity toward tv remotes and electrical wires was one I had not encountered before, but his fascination with shoes and stinky socks and underthings, I should have anticipated.  I had to close doors, place hard plastic things above the level of the coffee table (and his eyes), and be ever aware of new or absent puppy noises.  Both signal destruction.

The backyard was another new experience for me.  Dog A never had a backyard as a puppy.  She is now a more mature, wandering dog.  Sure, the yard is a minefield of poop (as the guy who mows my lawn likes to remind me), but I didn’t have to worry about freshly dug holes and plants being ripped out of the earth.  Now, Puppy W had a reputation of digging holes when he arrived, but as I expected Puppy W plus Dog A equals endless wrestling and chasing.  No time for holes.  Sort of.  There had been black weed cloth to cover a flower bed I never used.  It was well-buried and immovable from my perspective, but W had his way.  Now there are little shredded black pieces of cloth as well as double the amount of landmines lining the yard from fence to fence.  At least it’ll be well-fertilized.

Puppy W is cute.  His personality is that of a charmer.  He knows when it’s time to go to his crate for the night, and lies limp on the floor in the corner, daring me and knowing that I will strain my back to pick him up or at least get him started in the right direction.  Dog A is cute, beautiful even, but she is definitely not a charmer.  She is my protector and much like me.  Her personality is so deeply rooted in what she is, what she does, that the social easiness required of a charmer in seemingly unproductive situations eludes her.  She’s an introvert.  She has a job, she knows what it is, she can do it, but it’s also all or nothing.  It’s either turned on or turned off.  As for her barking and growling at passersby, it’s mostly turned on.  And it’s loud.

The disruption of an extroverted, lovely puppy and all the exuberance that comes with puppyness, has taken its toll on us, A and me.  But it’s good.  A definitely needs to learn that other animals can share our space without assault.  I suppose it’s always good for a singleton to invite more living beings into one’s sphere, but I truly believe A took up enough space that I didn’t need more.  Oh well, I’m a sucker.  It’s a lesson and a friend for A and a distraction and destruction of expectation and routine for me.  So, the other day when another friend came over and gasped at the strings extruded from rope knots, cotton stuffing strewn about, and dismembered toys all over the floor, she immediately began cleaning my puppygeddon.  I just laughed at how normal it had become.  I also know that puppygeddon will soon end.  I can clean my house then.