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Being human Medicine Reflections on Life, Being Human, and Medicine

Four Plastic Tubes and What They Taught Me About Leadership and Safety

It was overwhelming.

It had already been a long day. It was my first day. I had 4 tubes of a patient’s spinal fluid. I was suddenly responsible for them. I barely knew where I was. I had little idea of what I was doing. 

But I learned quickly. 

I was doing a medical student clinical rotation at the Portsmouth Naval Hospital. Technically I wasn’t even a 3rd year medical student yet. Honestly, I didn’t really know anything about clinical medicine.  

I was a part of the Health Professions Scholarship Program (HPSP). This is a program that covers the expenses of medical school in return for service afterwards as a military physician. The program also provided for 6 weeks per year of active duty. These could be done just for extra pay while I attended medical school, or I could do a clinical rotation at a military hospital.  I wanted to take advantage of the opportunity. I asked to do a clerkship in the summer between my 2nd and 3rdyears of medical school.  The 3rd year was when you start really doing clinical rotations. I was doing this clerkship a month before that.

I had no idea what to expect. The Navy would cover my travel expenses and my lodging. They issued military orders for me. They took care of getting my flights booked. Over the phone I asked the medical education secretary where to stay. Everything was full. She suggested I try a place called “Harbor Towers.”

When my flight arrived into the Norfolk, VA airport I took a cab. I gave him the name and address of the place I was going to be staying. I had no idea what it was going to be like. We drove down the busy highway and through the tunnel into Portsmouth and then through the side streets. He pulled up to an aged and run-down building. There was trash out front and there were clothes hanging off of the balconies. My heart sank as I thought that this was what I was in for.

The taxi driver asked one of the worn looking men hanging out front and they pointed down the road. He turned around and drove down by the water to an amazing upscale high-rise apartment building on the Elizabeth River. As we pulled up, I read the sign, “Harbor Towers.” I couldn’t believe it. It was amazing! It was new and plush and beautiful. I walked inside and they checked me in and gave me a furnished apartment with a view of the river on the 16th floor. It was honestly one of the nicest places I have ever stayed in my life.

The next day I walked to the Naval Hospital. There I got checked in and I was assigned to one of the internal medicine services. They explained to me that there were 3 inpatient internal medicine services. This meant that we would be in the hospital overnight and on call every 3rd night. When we were on call, we were responsible for all of the admissions as well as any cross-cover issues. There would be no attending physicians in the hospital. The resident was in charge and would delegate to the interns who in turn would delegate to us (the students). The intern started assigning me patients. I had no idea what to do. And we were on call. 

Naval Hospital Portsmouth

As the day progressed, I learned how to write admission orders (ADOCAVANDIMPLE was the acronym he taught me). I learned about writing H&Ps. That first evening he told me he would let me help him with a lumbar puncture (spinal tap). We positioned the patient on his side and prepped and then numbed the skin. He used an enormous needle and showed me how to find the space between the vertebrae and how he could get the samples of spinal fluid. The clear fluid slowly dripped out. He collected the spinal fluid in the 4 plastic tubes that were provided in the lumbar puncture kit. 

When he was finished, he started spewing information at me. He gave me a big list of things that needed to be done. He looked me in the face and paused for effect. He told me that he did not completely trust the lab. He told me what to do to be sure that all the tests would get done. He left to go see another patient.

I was terrified. 

I labeled the tubes with the patient’s name and date of birth. I asked the unit secretary to help me get all of the different lab slips that I needed. I carefully worked on filling them out. I asked her where the lab was and then I went down to the lab. I wandered around the lab looking at signs trying to find each part of the lab like the intern had told me. When I found one that I needed, I would walk around calling for help until I could get one of the corpsmen to pay attention. It was the evening and they were not being supervised. Some of them were not very motivated. Sometimes I had to go find them and drag them back to their lab. I then handed them the tube with the respective lab slip and told them how important it was that they get the tests run. In the end I got all 4 tubes to the right places in 4 different parts of the lab.

I breathed a breath of relief. 

It had been quite a day already. I had learned a lot. I learned about medicine. But I also learned about the processes of medicine. There was so much more than what was in textbooks or that I had learned from two years of sitting in the lecture halls. In that day and night, I learned that there was a lot more to practicing medicine than just anatomy or physiology or pharmacology. I learned a lot about the practice of medicine that included everything from how to balance my time, to how to chart, to how to fill out lab slips, and to how to make sure the lab actually did what needed to be done.

Things are a lot different now. We no longer would expect a medical student to manually fill out lab slips or wander around the lab bringing tubes to each section of the lab. We don’t generally expect them to stay up all night, every 3rdnight on call. We wouldn’t think about handing them the tubes of spinal fluid and walking off. To medical students today that likely would sound like the dark ages. 

But the challenges are still there, they are just different. Today they are more about figuring out how to use an electronic medical record. And they still have to figure out how to balance their time, how to ask for help, and how to work with the nurses and the patients and the whole dynamic that is hospital life.

Why do I share this story? Perhaps because it is such a strong memory. Perhaps it is because I know that so many of you can relate to the rapid learning that you go through when you first start doing clinical work. But also, it is because there are a couple of very strong lessons that are buried in the story.

Lesson #1: People are your most important asset:

It amazed me how determination and will can drive a broken system. The Naval Hospital was not perfect. There were a lot of flaws. But we could drive the system to work because we needed it to. We could make it work because we cared. The patients got really good care. This was regardless of a whole bunch of process problems.

I am a process kind of guy. I like to work to build processes as a foolproof way to ensure that mistakes and missteps do not happen. Process is important. Bad processes can be defeating to good people.

But in the end, the safety net still comes back to the people. If you have one person who cares – really cares – they can make up for dozens and dozens of process issues. It doesn’t mean that process doesn’t matter. But people matter even more. Keeping people who will take responsibility and own the job and ensure that it gets done is the most important thing that we can do. And if we create a perfect system but it denigrates or devalues the people who are involved, we have committed a critical sin. In so doing we have induced an amazing amount of risk. Without engaged people working the processes, the safety net has been pulled away.

I heard someone say once that they were going to create such a good system that it could make any physician practice good medicine. What was implied was that they didn’t need talent. It was only their processes that mattered.

Wrong. 

And scary.

He had great intentions. I am not challenging that. But his thinking was naïve and frankly arrogant. It showed a gap in his fundamental understanding of how our world works. Things are never perfect. Things go wrong. We have got to have safety nets in place. And the most effective safety nets are people who care about what they do.

Lesson #2: The pain and benefits of change:

That day and night were a lesson about what it means to learn. In the moment I didn’t enjoy it. It was painful. It was overwhelming. It was scary. It stretched my abilities and confidence so much that I was sure they were permanently broken. But they weren’t.

I learned so much that first day that I can still remember it even now 30 years later. It stretched and pulled me. But it also made me stronger.

That is what learning is like. If it is easy and comfortable you are not really learning. In order to learn you need to be pushed beyond your comfort level. You need to be stretched so that your muscles (your abilities) strengthen as a result of the exercise. So often we naively think that we can avoid the stretching and the pain. But that is the nature of growth. We need to remember that. We need to accept it and welcome it, knowing that the temporary pain brings growth that we will be thankful for afterwards.

I was in a meeting recently when we were dealing with change. The change was uncovering a bunch of broken processes. Fortunately, we have good people who are getting by (for now) to buy us the time to fix the processes. 

I thought about that night walking around getting the corpsmen to leave the television they were sitting by to process my patient’s spinal fluid. I thought of how I would go down to radiology to search for my patients x-rays that got misplaced. I thought about all the little things that we learned to do to check and double check that our patients were ok. I was thankful for the fact that we had good people making the system work. I am thankful that I still get to work with really good people who really care about what they do. 

In the meeting we talked about change. We talked about how this was going to make us all better. We were going to be able to provide good care to more patients. In the moment however it is no fun. It feels like we often get pushed to the point of breaking. But then we get stronger. 

I learned so much in that month in June of 1989 that I fell in love with internal medicine. We really had an impact on our patients. We did a lot of good. That was when I started to become a clinician. Two years later when I had my choice of where I wanted to go to train for residency, there was no question in my mind. I was going to go back to Portsmouth Naval Hospital. I knew there that I could and would work with good people. And I would really learn.

I was young. It was night. I was tired. I was overwhelmed. I was standing there holding 4 plastic tubes. They were 4 plastic tubes that I would remember for the rest of my life.

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Being human Reflections on Life, Being Human, and Medicine

I Was a Contestant on the Wheel of Fortune

My wife and I were watching the Wheel of Fortune the other night. One of the contestants was doing well but then he bought a “u”. There were no “u’s” in the puzzle. He lost control of the wheel. It moved to the other contestants and it never came back to him again, so he lost the round and was not the big winner.

I know how that goes. I also think I know why he bought the “u”.

Let me back up a little bit. 

It was in the mid 90s. I was working as a flight surgeon in the U.S. Navy in Norfolk, Virginia. There was an announcement on the news that the Wheel of Fortune was planning to do a military week on one of the aircraft carriers in Norfolk. They were going to hold auditions for active duty military members. I thought it would be fun, so I called to put my name in. I got invited to come for the audition.

The audition:  They had set up in a large meeting room at a local hotel. It was set up with rows of chairs facing the front. There were a couple of hundred people there. Once we were seated, they welcomed us and then gave us our instructions.

They handed out a page with a bunch of partially solved Wheel of Fortune (WOF) puzzles. It was sort of like trying to solve a bunch of hangman puzzles quickly. They gave us a certain amount of time to solve as many as we could. Once the time was up, we had to turn our papers over. We then went through grading them and they created a “cut off” to eliminate about ¾ of the people there. Those of us remaining moved up to the front rows of chairs.

I had read an article in the Virginian Pilot (the Norfolk Newspaper) before I went for the audition. The article said that they would be looking for “verve.” Webster says that verve is: a : the spirit and enthusiasm animating artistic composition or performance : vivacity. b : energy, vitality.

The next part then meant that I was going to need to show that I had “verve.”

It seemed like a scene out of some movie or television show. There were “Hollywood” type workers walking around the room holding their hands up in the shape of a square to look at all of us as we sat there.  They must have been the experts on identifying verve. 

The workers passed a microphone down each of the rows. One by one we had a chance to say our name and something about ourselves. When it was my turn, I made sure to do so with confidence and brightness. Honestly, I didn’t really know how to have verve. Those were at the least the closest things to what I knew might be verve.  We went through a couple of rounds of that sort of thing and then they thanked us and told us to have our picture taken on the way out. Each of us stood in line with the same Hollywood types watching us and then they came way too close to my face and took a super super close up picture.

I went home. I had no idea whether or not I would get accepted. The audition alone was a fun and interesting experience. 

The letter: I was off on deployment when the letter came. When I called home to talk with Sarah, she told me the exciting news. There was a letter from the WOF. She opened it and read it to me. I was going to be a contestant. They would notify me when they had a slot for me to be on the show.  It would be sometime in the next 12-18 months.

The call: I don’t remember when or how the call came. It was several months later. They had filled up all the slots for the week they did on the aircraft carrier. I was going to have to go to California to be taped. They called and I needed to be there in 2 days. Sarah let me use some of her frequent flyer miles to make the airline tickets affordable. We had small babies at home. I so wished she could have come too but it just didn’t make sense. Even now I am amazed at how understanding of a woman Sarah is. Out of the two of us she truly is the game player. She routinely beats me at games. She has a great mind for them. It would have made sense for her to go. But the audition that got me in was an active duty military one. I was selected. Sarah never once complained. Off I went. I felt alone on the plane and wished that Sarah was with me. I had been dutifully watching the show and doing WOF puzzle books in training for the past several months. As I flew to California, I had my puzzle book out doing puzzle after puzzle, quizzing my mind, conditioning it, and training.  I got to California in the late evening but with the time change it was still early evening. I tried to go to bed but the adrenaline was flowing. I set an alarm but also had a wakeup call just in case. I would hate to oversleep. It was an odd and fitful night.

The day: They filmed a week of shows in a day. We went to the studio in the morning. 

The 1st part of the day was a lot of legal stuff. They had us sign papers and explained rules and techniques to us. We were told how they would randomly choose which show we would be on for the week. We were told about using all of the clues that were available including making sure to look at the used letter board. We were told that they would tell us if all the vowels were gone so that we wouldn’t buy a vowel when there were none left in the puzzle. That meant that if 4 of the vowels had already been purchased and they hadn’t told us that all the vowels were gone, you would know for certain that you could safely buy the 5th vowel. 

They had a snack table with various cheeses, crackers, pastries, drinks, etc… It was for us but also for the other shows that were filming. I looked for television stars to come to the table at each of our breaks. As a group of contestants, we got to know each other. We were from all over the country and we were from all walks of life. There was a mother of small children. She was the warm and soothing type. There was a reporter for a small newspaper from the east coast. He was a negative sort of self-denigrating but in a humorous way kind of guy. There was a young “class clown” guy from southern California. When we had to have our driver’s licenses scanned, he showed us his license. He had worn an outlandish costume for his driver’s license photo. He had to convince them that it was truly him for his ID for the show. There was even a rock music AM radio station disc jockey from Los Angeles. He was a tall, tanned, muscular and confidant late 30s’ guy with long loose hair that constantly blew back in a perfect way wherever he was.  If you picture a sort of younger version of Fabio, that was him.  By the end of the morning, we had all started to become friends.

When it was time for lunch, we walked across the studio to a shared cafeteria for all of the studio. As we were in line, Alex Trebek walked close by with his tray of food. It felt surreal. It was hard to believe that I was really there and really doing this.

We walked back to our meeting room next to the sound stage after lunch.  They had us pull ping pong balls out of a bucket. There would be 3 of them that were marked. Whoever got a marked ball was going to be on the next show. Once they were selected, they had them draw again to determine who would be in each position (1st, 2nd, or 3rd). Those of us that were not selected would go and sit and watch their show being taped. This happened 4 times. I didn’t get selected for any of the 1st four shows. I was going to be on the Friday show. By now it was late in the afternoon. I was nervous that I was going to be tired. I had been on an adrenaline rush for about 36 hours now.  It also meant that if I won, I would have to come back on Monday for another day of taping.

The show: I was in my uniform. I had it perfectly pressed and tried to look as sharp as I could. The floor of the studio was very shiny. The studio audience sitting area was much smaller than what I had imagined it would be. The announcer was talking with the audience and giving directions.

Pat Sajak walked in. From that point on it was entirely clear who was in charge. He was a confident, pleasant but very clearly authoritative figure. He made sure that everything was in order and ready to go. He was not just a performer. This was his show and he was going to make sure that everything was done well. The announcer and everyone clearly respected him and followed his lead for how things would be done. Vanna was over at the letter board across the room. 

The equipment was far more physical and simpler than what I had imagined. The wheel itself had sheets of painted plywood. The dollar amounts were literally just painted on a sheet of plywood. They would change out the sheets of plywood between each puzzle so as to rearrange them to make the game more challenging and random. The used letter board was on the other side of the room and consisted of a clothesline with 3×5 cards with the letters of the alphabet written on them. When a letter was called, a worker would flip the card up to show that the letter had been used.

Having watched 4 shows being filmed already I had become acutely aware of how important it was to be in control. If you were the one who was calling out letters you had control. Once it was not your turn, the others could solve the puzzle and it may never come back to you. Every spin of the wheel was a risk. You could get a large dollar amount, but you could also lose your turn or get a bankrupt. No matter how good of a puzzle solver you might be, if it was not your turn you were not going to get a chance to win. You needed to be strategic and focused on your game when your turn came.

Between each round Pat would talk with us. The workers would come to change the puzzle and change the wheel. They would lift up the big plywood sheets that had the dollar amounts on them for the wheel and put new ones down. Pat would talk with us while the cameras were stopped. Pat is clearly very polished. He knew how to make small talk and make it enjoyable. 

Vanna came over also. She looked older up close than what I expected. On television at that time she still looked very young. Up close she showed that she was in her 50s. She was very lovely. She had on heavy stage makeup. She was pleasant and kind. 

It was my turn and I was in control of the wheel. It was a big puzzle and I was accumulating some real dollars. This might be my chance to be the big winner. I could not lose control of the wheel. I looked across the room and saw that all the vowels were gone except for the “u”. That meant that I could safely buy the “u”. If there were no more vowels, they would have had to have told us.  There had to be a “u”.

I hadn’t looked at the used letter board carefully enough.  

There was still an “i” available.  

There were no “u’s” in the puzzle. It moved on from me to the next person. The next person solved the puzzle. The category was before and after. The puzzle was, “Banana Split Personality.”  Or as my family jokes with me about, “Banana Splut Personaluty!”

The wheel never came around to me again. I was not the big winner for the day. I did win $6350. That was not too bad for one day.  

I had to sit and watch the person who won play the big puzzle at the end.  I was practiced and really good at puzzle solving. It was easy. I could see the answer right away. If it had been me, I would have won the expensive Chevrolet Corvette. She didn’t see it. She didn’t win the prize. The taping was over, and we all left to go back to our hotel.

The afterparty: The contestant who was the rock music AM radio station disc jockey wanted to show us “his town”. I don’t know where he took us, but it was a few loud and raucous bars. Once again it felt surreal. He was a popular figure. People were coming up and hugging him and clapping him on the back. The music was loud. The lights were dark and flashing. I felt out of place. It was strange to see it all. I was happy when it was over, and I could go back to my hotel. I flew home the next morning. It was a whirlwind. And then it was over.

The lessons:  What lessons could I take from the experience?  I guess there are a few:

  1. There are some wild experiences out there. The entire thing felt surreal. To be walking around the studios, having lunch beside Alex Trebek, chatting with Pat and Vanna, sitting in the studio audience, and even going to the “hip and happening” areas of downtown Los Angeles were just wild.
  2. My wife is amazing. I am sure she would have loved to have been in my place. She never complained about me going. She is truly amazing. I had the chance to go and she was really and truly happy for me to do it. What a cool woman.
  3. Life goes on. Buying the “u” felt awful when I saw there was still an “i”. It was a simple mistake. Sometimes simple mistakes cannot be fixed. Sometimes you have to just live with the consequences. I didn’t win the Corvette or the $25,000. To this day I still wince when I think about “Banana Splut Personaluty.” But life goes on. In the end it was one small thing. It was disappointing in the moment but not really that big of a deal in the terms of my life.  “It is what it is,” and “Life goes on,” are both very powerful and helpful expressions. They have helped me walk through many a difficult experience through my life.
  4. I did win $6350. That was pretty cool and helped with the down payment for our 1st house.
  5. I also won a year’s supply of Rikola cough drops. I was a little worried that Metamucil was a sponsor. Fortunately, I ended up with just a gym bag from them rather than a lifetime supply of fiber products!  I didn’t realize that everyone got gifts from the sponsors. My show was run as a “rerun” once. And when that happened – I once again got gifts from the various sponsors. That was really fun.

The contestant the other night bought a “u”. He lost control of the puzzle board. The next person solved the puzzle.  

I know how it feels. I understand why he likely bought the “u”. You have got to look closely at the used letter board. 

He will be ok. It is what it is. It can be exciting and fun while it lasts, but life continues to go on.