Ian and Claire's Australia Travels

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Early Morning Post

As per usual, I am in the library. I feel kind of cheated, as I got up in time for the bus and caught the one for Woden. Unfortunately, it seems that not all roads lead to Woden (a blessing?) and so I found myself on a magical mystery tour of the Canberrian suburbs. I missed the morning handover meeting, which is a shame, seeing as it is the highlight of my day and they fuel you up with caffeine in preparation for the long day ahead. Today is special though - we have a clinic in half an hour, and hopefully not all the patients will DNA this time. Then we go to see the patient I saw yesterday and hope that some headway has been made with the CT. So much work - how will I ever cope?

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Another Day.....

.....and some work to do! I started off the day by having coffee with Ian (whom I managed to persuade to come in early) for 2 hours (I am getting far too familiar with the guys at the coffee bar) when I received a call from an anxious patient wanting stuff done. So that took ages to sort out (10 mins at home, but I had to find the notes, call the secretary, call the Consultant when the secretary wouldn't make an appointment without the Consultant's say-so etc). Then I got a classic call from Surgery. A patient with a PE post-op on IV heparin - could I come and tell them when to start warfarin?

I didn't go and see that patient.

My Consultant thought it was great and said that we should wait for the 3rd such phone call. It was great having some Consultant interaction, as I'm really missing that and we had a bit of clinical banter. He then proceeded to launch into how Scotland had been beaten in some kind of televised sport. Most of the Consultants are very sporty here, and they all go running/rowing at 5am.

I've had a really interesting consult today, and I've recommended loads of things which had all been put into motion in the 30 minutes that I left the ward without me asking for them to be done - very surreal. Of course, the entire management plan hinges on whether or not something in the lung can be biopsied, and to do this, we need the CT. Naturally, it has gone missing. I have been to ultrasound (they have the empty CT packet), nuclear medicine, CT, the filing room, reception and the main X-ray area and although I found the chest x-ray and last year's scan, this one has vanished. It's nice to know that some things don't vary from coutry to country - one such area being the CT department - we really were spoiled in Dumfries. At least the Radiologists seem nice. As I was getting nowhere, a kindly intern has gone a-wandering, what will most likely be a vain bid to source the errant CT.

I have another 30 minutes left, and then it's off home. Ian is in here until 11pm, so I guess I won't see him until Saturday morning now. We do have the weekend off together, and as Ian is working loads of weekends, we'll probably try and do something. We also have a Respiratory clinic tomorrow, and 'as long as the rest of them don't DNA because they've heard a Scottish person is here to see patients', I should have some work to do. Plus there's the CT to be found for tomorrow morning.

Then I move onto the District General. I am particularly thrilled to find out that the person I am covering for has not swapped the 2 on call shifts, and am really looking forward to covering them - 8-11pm, brilliant.

Not content with toppling Bernard Matthews, Jamie Oliver is trying to break Australia too, and is filming a gritty programme in Melbourne where a group of ex (and some current, as we will apparently discover tonight) drug users and various disadvantaged youths try to become world-class chefs in several months. I find that as I do most of my studying during the day, that although I get home later, I still have at least a couple of hours to relax doing mindless stuff like watching Futurama. If I go soon, I can catch the Simpsons....

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Work - at last!

Well, it's 4pm and I have actually done some work!!! Admittedly, I have only done one consult and an ETT, but I got to interact with my Consultant and feel marginally useful, even if all I recommended was as per the admitting team. I managed to drag it out (again, a half hour max job at home) over several hours though, mainly as every other team in the hospital wanted to see him and he kept disappearing for various imaging and interventional radiological procedures, which would take about a billion hours to organise in the UK, but they seem much more blase about that kind of thing here. I've not quite decided whether that is a good thing or not. I have a very good Consultant though, which is great. Shame it's only for another 2 days. If I could stay on this ward and actually have some work to do then I think I would quite enjoy the next few months. At least Geriatrics will look good on my CV, being broadly equivalent to General Medicine in the UK, if not over here. I was supposed to see 2 patients in clinic today, which I was really psyched up about, but they both DNA'd. I might get to see someone on Friday morning though.

They have very sophisticated ETTs here - instead of a treadmill, so I suppose it should really be an EBT. They also make the patients do spirometry at the same time, and you have to take manual BPs througout. The 12 lead trace and the haemodynamic response measures are pretty much the same as we have, but the pulmonary component adds a new dimension. Yet again, the MRCP came in useful, as I was able to confidently say that her flow-volume loop was normal. Unfortunately, I couldn't say the same for the myriad of numbers which flashed up on screen, with not a TV (although rather worryingly, a VT), RV or FRC in sight. From the reference data, it all seemed OK though, and compatible with normal respiratory physiology. I was reading that 1 in 10,000 people die during ETTs and that 3 in 10,000 will have some sort of major event. I've luckily only had 2 people have severe chest pain persist after an ETT, and they were both on the same day, naturally a clinic day.

Yesterday was pretty quiet, apart from one bleep, which turned out to be someone wanting the other Resp. Reg. I did loads of reading and decided to learn about surgery. I also did an MRCP Part 1 paper out of interest, to see if I could still pass. I got 72%, which would be a pass today, but in the days of negative marking, as this 1997 paper was, I might have been pushing it a little. I suppose if I had been working by negative marking, I wouldn't have answered a lot of questions, though so who knows.

Ian is working 1-11pm for the next 2 days so I'm looking forward to the weekend, seeing as the evening will be spent in the company of Mr. Wombat. Mr. Wombat is an amazingly lifelike hand puppet which Ian bought me. Although he is cute and cuddly, unfortunately he's a pretty poor conversational partner.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Canberra and The Hospital

After a prolonged absence, we now have access to the internet after A and E hours meant that Ian was able to co-ordinate with the internet man between 9-5. Ironically, I now have most of 9-5 to mess about on the internet myself, albeit in a hospital setting. I am a Respiratory Registrar for the week and have very little to do. They have plenty doctors and interns here . What they do from 8-5pm, we would fit into 9-11am in Dumfries, because of the time pressures there. Despite being a tertiary referral centre (PCI and a 24 hour cath lab on site, so everyone gets and angio and no thrombolysis here!) there wards aren't as busy as back home, mainly as A and E is so much better here and takes a lot of patients into the 48 hour ward it has - so no overdoses, ACIS with the morning troponins etc. The Ward Reg. sees the patients (about 8 today) and I see any A and E referrals and ward consults. I also do the clinic (2 patients booked in so far!) and Exercise Tests - 1 so far to do tomorrow. I would like to do more, partly because I'm really bored and also because the clinical work is stuff I've done loads of times in Dumfries, and I'd like to show the Consultants I'm competent so that when it gets to the 2am Resus Call, we have a good rapport.


It's not all relaxation however - I got to review a lady in ICU yesterday regarding wheeze. My Consultant (who is clinically excellent) is unavailable so I can't discuss it with him. I wouldn't normally discuss wheeze with anyone back home but people here seem to like to be involved in everything and I think I overstepped the mark by starting an antihypertensive on my own last week. So I have been free since 8.40am. I went up to the ward but the Ward Reg. only has a few patients and she has 2 interns and a med student to help her with them so there's nothing to do there. At least Ian is working 8-6 today so I'm waiting for him to have a coffee break or lunch.

Still, at least this is better than Geris. Patients here only get admitted to Geris if there is no other possible place for them to go - so that normally means people who need physio or social admissions and people with unfixable fractures or Parkinson's Disease, or people with dementia. So ward rounds are really social rounds with the occasional bit of medicine thrown in. In terms of clinical practice, most of the Consultants seem to use the same guidelines as we do, which is a relief. In saying that, I have seen antibiotic and renal practices which would enrage the respective Dumfries Consultants - such as the one where you don't treat a systolic of 170 in a diabetic with a previous CVA because of the risk of glomerular hypoperfusion, or treating a proven staph sepsis sensitive to flucloxacillin with 3 different antibiotics - presumably to make sure that the patient is depleted of their entire stock of bacteria, and not just the offending staph. I'm in Geris till January (the only speciality with 1 in 3 weekend on-call) then Haematology and Palliative Care for 3 months each.

It's very strange being at work and having nothing to do. In Dumfries I could have gone and helped with receiving or A and E or helped with someone else's ward round but here, there is much less work (most days involve a ward round of 15 patients, max and at least 1 intern to help out). Sadly I can't leave until 5pm in case someone wants a Resp. Reg review. Next week I go the local DGH so I'm hoping that will be a bit busier.

So, Canberra.

It took a bit of getting used to. When we first arrived, we were staying in the Hospital Accomodation. Our room was very bleak, just 2 beds and a sink. The corridor had a picture of an abbatoir featuring a distressed sheep outside our room. Plus, there wasn't enough room on the staff floor, so we ended up in the outpatient quarters. I imagine that most of those were patients who were in for chemo, as they had that characteristic pale and washed out look about them, plus they seemed to spend a lot of time in the bathroom. Either that, or they'd just had Picolax. We walked for about a mile without seeing anything but a bare wasteland, and finally came to Woden. Appropriately named, as it is indeed a den of woe, Woden consists mainly of a grey shopping centre and a used car yard.

Thankfully, we had a week before work began, and so we spent the next few days traipsing round the city, trying to find an apartment. The one which we found is in the centre, and is nice in a very modern kind of way - it's like living in IKEA (you'd like it, Mum). We have an open plan kitchen and living room and a bedroom, as well as a bathroom. There is a balcony, which we are growing herbs on as a substitute garden. There is also a small outdoor pool and gym for the complex. We've made it to the gym once, as in order to get to work, we have to get up at 6am to get the 2 buses there, and we get back at about 7pm, eat and go to sleep. Aside from the last couple of nights, where I've decided to live dangerously and wash my hair the night before, thus giving me an extra half hour in bed.

The wildlife is also quite cool - there are several flocks of Galahs around the hospital and we keep seeing Cockatoos and parrots flying around. We keep hoping that a galah will land on one of the power lines, so we can shout 'You flaming galah!' at it. There are also quite a few Kangaroos as you get further out, including one which has been slowly decomposing adjacent to the hospital for the past week. I've seen a few smaller spiders in the bushes, and one night, we saw a massive one the size of my palm outside, crawling along beside a building site and covered in dust. after reading that there is one species of spider which particularly loves bathrooms, I am now able to go in to one without checking every crevice for one, in case it runs out (some of them have excellent eyesight, apparently) and bites me. No snakes or scorpians yet!

The city is very open which is nice, and compared to built up places it is really nice. Being so dry though, the greenery is quite pale and there's a lot of yellow and brown and everything is really new and modern - completely differently to Scotland. Sydney was really nice as it had a lot of Victorian buildings. We had 4 nights there - I would totally recommend it. They have some gorgeous Botanical Gardens, including many trees which are filled with fruit bats, which appear to have an alarmingly large wingspan. The image of several hundred menacing-looking upside-down bats does not seem to be one which Sydney embraces, and they are looking for ways to get rid of the bats. Apparently, bats hates snakes (I never though I would have so much in common with a bat) and so they have put essence of snakes up the trees. The bats, however, remain impervious and are resolutely hanging on. We saw the bridge and opera house as well, and had a nice little ride on a ferry round the harbour. A man we met in a shop told us not to go to Bondi Beach - "I just love Manly'" he said to Ian, pointing us in the direction of Manly beach, but seeing as he was evidently gay, I wonder whether he meant to send us there or not. Either way, the tide was in and so were the sharks, so we sat on the 1m of sand we could find spare, and then went back to the ferry.

They also had a 3D cinema at the harbour, which was showing a 3D film about underwater life, narrated by (but sadly not featuring) Johnny Depp. We also went on a wine tasting with several other younger people, which was fun.

As I said, Canberra is really modern, but the 2 pages which it usually gets allocated in the guide books is a bit unfair. There is a great little village called Gold Creek village which again, takes ages to get to by bus, but you can spend the day there. It has a miniature village called Cockington Green (very British, chaps) featuring scaled-down models of 'typical' British buildings. Funny how they seem to have glossed over most of the UK except Devon and Braemar castle? Still, it settled our homesickness for greenery. There are loads of craft exhibitions there as well.

There is a really cool market on a Sunday, which ranges from crafts to food, so we've gone there for the past couple of weeks. There's also the war memorial to see, the Botanical Gardens, and the Telstra Tower, which is a large revolving tower, providing views of Canberra. Plus, there's a cinema nearby which admittedly only shows 5 films at a time, but after Dumfries, that's actually quite a lot! There's also the National Museum, National Gallery and a few other National places to see. We've arrived at a good time as Spring means Floriade, which is the Canberra Flower Festival, primarily dedicated to the tulip. This mainly involves lots of tulips planted around the lake. It's nice to see so many colours, but I do miss the variety of garden stuff - I think that's one of the biggest differences here in general. Hospital life differs too. Apart from the substantially decreased workload, if you work any later than you are supposed to, you can fill out a form and they pay you more. This goes against what we do back home, and I've not filled one out, as NHS indoctrination has so far prevented me from doing so. Yes, I have actually stayed late a couple of times, as I didn't do my own ward round much last week, but went on one with the other Reg, Michael. Michael is an angel. He is just the most wonderful guy ever. If I ever get sick here, I want Michael to be my doctor. Come to think of it, I want him to be my nurse too. He kindly took me around the hospital and on his ward round and a few consults, to get used to the new system. The 2 major differences, apart from the workload, are that all the drug names are different, (they don't have bendrofluazide or IV augmentin, to name 2) and that Consultants like to be involved in every aspect of patient care.

The title 'Registrar' is slightly different to back home. Here, they can be Registrars without passing their MRCP equivalent. Most of the Regs here haven't got it. Those that have got it, are called Advanced Trainees. They've put me on the normal Reg rota, which is fine by me - as long as I get my 6 months of Cancer Medicine to give me a chance to work back in Scotland with Ian, that's all I want. It's definitely better than being a Medical Student, which is what the Consultant whom I had last week thought I was, until the actual med student mentioned that I was a Reg - people are older here. It's lucky she did mention this, as when he had given Michael the grown-up stuff to do, and told me that I could do the Mini-Mental State Examination and Geriatric Depression Score, I had been biting my lip to stop myself from saying that I thought I was slightly more advanced and could probably handle something a little grittier.

I have loads of time to check out internet stuff, and am slightly cheered to see that doctors are fighting back against the implementation of MMC. Make sure you add your name to www.mmcdiscussion.org as the latest is that we will apply for a job in the area 'Scotland' and I really don't fancy being stuck in Shetland for 3 years while Ian gets Borders. From the petition, it seems like loads of other people have been forced to go to Oz as well. I'm seeing pages springing up to help doctors who are quitting make the transition into another career, which is sad. From the way things are going, it seems like a choice we're going to have to make - do we stay in Medicine and risk living away from our spouses and families, possibly in a speciality we don't even want, or do we settle for an alternative career, with one of those nice extras ike job security, geographical security, being able to live with one's husband...... Tell all your friends and colleagues to add their names too. Non-medics can add their name to the site as well on a seperate petition.

Well, Ian should be free for lunch soon, and I only have another 3 hours and 20 minutes. I'm getting really into JAMA though, and my guideline knowledge has never been so good.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Sinagapore Slings and Tropical Storms

Hello from Singapore!

We're sitting at the airport, waiting for our flight. We arrived 3 hours early to get past any delays, but fortunately, Singapore is much more organised than the UK and so we have had 2 hours and 45 minutes to waste in the airport. This must be the coolest airport in the world. It is really chilled out and has a pool, spa, and multiple shopping opportunities.

We've had a really good time in Singapore. The weather has been consistent, with intense heat throughout the day, which climaxes with a thunderstorm each evening. We forgot our umbrella for the first few evenings, and of course, when we remembered it, it was sunny.

Despite the obligatory virus which infects most of the aeroplane passengers via the recycled air, we managed to see quite a lot of Singapore. The most striking thing about it was how clean it was. Britain could learn a thing or two.

Auntie Alison, you'll be glad to know we tried a Singapore Sling (although not in Raffles, as we ran out of time). Ian, with his magnetism for girly drinks with pink cocktail umbrellas and sparklers, had this one of course.

We also went to Singapore Zoo, which is kind of like an open plan tropical rainforest. It gives the illusion of animals without fences (although if you look closely, you can see the odd well-camofluaged electric one). They had this bit which was dedicated to tropical crops, and they had the cutest little baby pineapples, which grow on stalks. I wonder how the manage when they get any bigger, the stalks looked so fragile. I guess they just topple over and the pineapples grow on the ground.

Singapore Zoo are onto a good thing, as they shut up at 6pm, and have a Night Safari at 7.30pm, leaving a good hour and a half for tourists to eat/drink. We did this, and saw these Indonesian dancers with a clear death-wish performing various scary acts involving burning torches. The night safari was excellent - you board a tram and go through a tropical rainforest and see all the nocturnal animals who are usually asleep in screened-off cages during the day. They had gentle lighting (otherwise it would have been a bit of a boring trip in the pitch-black rainforest) to let you see the animals. My favourite was this cute deer-type creature called a Mouflon - they were gorgeous! Ian liked the flying squirrels, and the tigers. They had white tigers, which were great to see - they had pink noses and blue eyes. I don't usually buy into zoos, but ones like this, where they have loads of space and an active interest in conservation can only be good. Interestingly, there were a couple of rather bemused-looking Polar Bears. Wonder what they made of the heat? Random fact : Singapore Zoo has the first polar bear to be bred in the tropics!

We're off to Sydney for a few days before hitting Canberra to find some place to live. There's not much time to write here, as the internet time is divvied up into blocks of 15 minutes and so I lose everything in the next minute if I don't post. I don't have time to check the spelling (this keyboard is rubbish, and keeps sticking). Singapore has been a bit low on internet cafes, but Australia, home of backpackers, is bound to have plenty. I'll write more about our time in Singapore when I'm not bound by time constraints. See you in Oz!

Thursday, September 14, 2006

About to go!

It's the morning of our departure and Dundee is not living up to its reputation as Scotland's sunniest city. In fact, it's chucking it down with rain. Which made cleaning out the car even more pleasant a task than it would normally have been.

We had the grandparents and Auntie Alison, and even a shock visit from my brother Kenneth, last night. We are about to go to Grandpa's again though, as there are still remove essential items in there, e.g. a coat, Haematology book in language I can understand.

Mum and Dad are coming to Edinburgh airport with us to say goodbye. We're meeting up with my sister Kirsty for lunch which should be nice.

The Australian Foreign Office have caused our itinerary to change somewhat, after issuing a statement that there was a high threat of terrorist attacks on Bali, so after multiple phonecalls, we've managed to bypass that, and will be in Singapore for 4 nights and then Sydney for 3. Everyone who has been to Singapore says it's great and there seems to be loads to do there. Sydney should be cool as well, although I've been reading some rather disturbing reports about vicious and innately defensive Sydney funnel-web spiders. Apparently, they are really aggressive, and build their nests at head height, and jump out and you and bite your face. I wondered if this was just Dave having a laugh, but there are various pictures on the web (haha) of black and chunky spiders rearing up to expose some pretty nasty looking fangs. Accordingly, we are staying in the centre of Sydney, as they're supposed to live in suburbia. Although I don't let Ian kill anything in the UK, he's been granted permission to do so with any spiders he might see.

We have managed to get the suitcases down to 22kg each, which is only 2kg over. Actually, Ian has to be the one to take credit for this. How will I survive without my multi-coloured wardrobe? I have taken the sad decision to leave my pink stethoscope behind, and opted for the sensible black Cardiology stethoscope.

The Australian periods of employment are different to ours, and so we will arrive when they have 2 weeks left. I will be starting off in a big Geriatric Department for 2 weeks, doing General Duties, i.e. they don't have a vacant post for the first 2 weeks, so that should ease me in gently. I'll be doing 3 months of Haematology after that, and they still have to work out the rest of the rota. We don't know exactly what Ian will be doing yet.

Oh well, Dad ought to be home from the hospital soon, and then we can get a lift to Grandpa's. Although, Dad does seem to exist in his own little version of time, once he's inside that hospital. We have quite a lot of Tesco vouchers which expire before we return, and so Mum and I are going to Tesco to purchase her favourite wine so she can drown her sorrows.

Dad's arrived home, and his OCD is taking over with the need to have everything precisely on schedule, so we'll leave you here and see you in Singapore (which is apparently in the grip of a Typhoon)! Wish I'd taken the Ward 8 nurses up on their offer of Temazepam.....

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

More Technological Advances

I'm very excited as I've managed to post links, which involved lots of linking web addresses into meaningless (well, to me anyway) letters and numbers. They are at the right hand side of this thing, and I've posted 3 links. I still have to figure out how to do those URL thingies though, where you click on a link and it goes straight to the website. Ah well, too much, too soon.

One is to the Canberra Hospital and it tells you what goes on there - pretty self-explanatory.

Another is to Naveen's Page - Naveen was one of the SHOs I worked with in Dumfries and has a page which periodically plagiarises Dr. McMahon's entries, interspersed with the odd smattering of Dumfries life.

The 3rd is MJM Wardrounds, which is written by Dr. Mike McMahon, a Consultant Physician/Rheumatologist in Dumfries Infirmary. Memorable for a special mention in the BMJ, this blog replaced most of my Thursday nights (and as these were the Junior Doctor Nights out, was invaluable for my LFTs). For anyone preparing for the MRCP (and indeed, anyone doing General Medicine), I cannot recommend this blog highly enough. It's got some great links and tutorials and Podcasts (where MJM gives tutorials which our computer masks with white noise) and I find it really good, as it makes you focus on one subject closely and you learn it really well. Approximately 5 junior doctors are given a paper to read (usually a medical article written in easy-to-read English)-and a
2 minute tutorial to prepare e.g. Operative intervention in Aortic Stenosis. These are presented during a 30 minute coffee break to MJM and Dr. Jones, one of the other Ward 10 Consultants (both milk, no sugar). As you start speaking, MJM activates a timer which emits a loud 'BEEP, BEEP, BEEP' noise at 2 minutes.

We have Alex, Ian's younger brother with us tonight, who has journeyed up with Ian's Uncle Trev to nick Ian's guitars and is currently drinking him way through our remaining alcohol. I managed to book flights from Sydney to Canberra tonight, so that's another thing sorted.

A worrying development on the MMC front is an email I received from them the NES Head of Communication today, who hinted that we would probably have to fly back from Oz to the UK for any interviews we might have for August 2007, in March/April 2007. This would kind of suck, as a) my family are coming out to see us then b) flights to the UK are not cheap c) it's not the best news to tell the Canberra Consultants, although they all seem really nice and as it's a 1 in 14 (surely that can't be right?) on call, it's still worrying to have to wait until MMC decide to tell us in Feb whether we need to come over or not and not to be able to tell them anything concrete. Still, we're going up to Dundee tomorrow to hang out with various people and on the way, we're stopping off in Edinburgh to see my friend Catriona and her son Oliver, who is 4 weeks old - can't wait.