What to Expect as an Intern

Happy belated Father's Day to all the fathers out there; I hope everyone enjoyed the weekend. My pops, brother and I enjoyed Father's Day on the water for the second annual Father-Son Fishing Tournament my uncle puts on. We were up bright and early, on the water by 5:45am, fishing the bay as the sun was on its way up. The early birds ended up catching the worm, too. There were 11 boats in the tournament, but the Cuban Cowboys (our team name) walked away with the trophy! It was a perfect Father's Day gift for pops. 

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So we're about half way through the trimester and I've already been getting questions from some the 7th  trimester students about what to expect when they step into Student Clinic and clinic in general. Very valid question, a question I wish I could have asked upper classmen when I was in 7th Tri. Unfortunately, being part of the first graduating class of the Florida campus, I was the upperclassman. So, being the benevolent blog writer I am, I have decided to share a typical day of clinic with everyone and hopefully ease some minds of what's expected of an intern at the Florida campus.

Our Mondays begin bright and early at 8am. I usually like to get to clinic around 7:45 to check my mailbox for any files that Dr. Heiser has a tagged with sticky notes, "pieces of flare" as we call them, that require fixing on my part before he signs off on them. Once my files are corrected, if any, I like to pull the file for my first patient of the day, just to remind myself of how the patient was last visit, where the treatment is going to go--and because Dr. Heiser loves to quiz you on any and every detail of the file. Patient interaction and treatment is the easy part; just be ready to throw out a few differential diagnoses to Dr. Heiser and a few different treatment options just in case he's still in the quizzing mood, which is usually all of the time.

The frustrating/not fun part of clinic is the meticulous paper work that comes along with any patient visit. Though the paper work is the bane of my existence, it is second only to patient care in importance during clinic. Patient notes are how you cover your butt and if it isn't in the notes, it didn't happen, so you just have to suck it up and work through the hand cramps. A word of advice would be to stay current on your notes, and try your best not to have them back up on you. There is nothing much worse than sitting in clinic until 8:30pm trying to sort through a day's worth of patient visits in your head and not mix up visits when writing notes.

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You will be busy all day while in clinic, so be prepared. If you are not seeing patients, which should be your goal, then you will be reading on certain conditions and treatment options, or writing SOAP notes, or narratives, or auditing files. Clinic is the accumulation of our education in action, and is an incredible experience, but like anything else, you will only get out of clinic what you put in. So please, take it seriously, but have a good time with it.

I hope this gave a little glimpse of clinic for those who are entering next trimester, and hopefully gives you a little piece of mind. I love being in clinic, and the rest of what clinic entails is better learned through experience. The education up until 8th Tri more than prepares you for what clinic has in store for you, so don't let it stress you out too much.

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Don't forget to be rooting for the Spanish national team during the Euro Cup! I keep it real even under my clinic attire.

Catch everyone on the flip.

Dex