Breathe Easy, You've Found Me ((HUGS))

People will wonder why this blog is needed, why minority midwifery student? It's very simple actually; I was looking for this blog...but I couldn't find it...so I created it. We all have unique experiences, and every experience, every story, can help someone else. I am a black girl from the hood at an ivy league professional school. That, alone, is reason enough to write. Somebody was looking for this blog. Someone wanted proof that what I'm doing can be done - even when you come from where we come from.

To that person especially, WELCOME.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

over 19,000 views to my blog over the course of it's inception.

The End


Hi friends,

The end of this blog is near... actually, it's here. 

I am no longer a midwifery student.

I remember when I finished my first blog, minority nursing student, and moved over to this space. It seems so long ago. The years of being in midwifery school were achingly slow, and yet three years later, here I am. Done. And it's still surreal. 

From minority nursing student to minority midwifery student to minority midwife, so much has happened. I've changed so much... and yet, not much at all. I'm happy with this... it was my wish for myself when I left my big little city and went off to ivy1.

Thanks for listening for the last three years (or few days to the new followers I just realized I had :o) What a ride we've shared!

signing off for the very last time,
minoritymidwiferystudent





Monday, July 6, 2009

I've Moved!

Minority Midwifery Student is no longer a student!

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Patience and Contentment

I'm reminding myself that it will take a while to find a job. I'm reminding myself that I graduated less than a month ago. I'm reminding myself that my loans have all been successfully deferred until December.
Every day I find myself whispering "be patient" to myself in the two seconds that I am not freaking out over not having a job... or even an interview... or even a call back.
I'm telling myself not to panic. Not to send my resume all over the country. To just stay put in this little city I am falling in love with and have faith that I will be able to find a job around here.
I was not prepared for this part. 
I pride myself on being prepared.
I know this could be an adventure. I could go ahead and send my resume into the wind and interview in places I never imagined living.  We could pick up and move to a reservation or a rural town. The man says he'll live wherever... for a little while. 
But I don't want to. 
It's not that I'm not adventurous. It's not that I'm not a risk taker. 
It is that I'm tired of moving. Tired of starting over. 
I want to settle down. I need health insurance and access to advanced medical treatments. I want to come home to a furnished house with furniture I picked out and art on the walls. I want to build community without the "we'll be leaving soon" detachment mechanisms. 
I've earned a break from adventure and risk taking and starting over and even excitement for a while. I've walked confidently/scarily into life changing opportunities, and grown from it.
But I'm sitting down now... 
Because there is beauty and honor and challenges and growth and happiness in the stillness, too.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

I Graduated

It feels weird.

I'm roaming around the public library right now, trying to find something good to read.

I have tons of calls to make to try to get these loans into deferment on Monday.

I am slowly applying for jobs, but having no luck.

I can't believe I'm finished.

There is relief, but there is also panic.



Thursday, May 21, 2009

I Said I'd Let You Know...

Well, the celebration begins in...

5
.
.
.
4
.
.
.
3
.
.
.
2
.
.
.
1
.
.
.
NOW!!!!!!!!

MinorityMidwiferyStudent graduates in a few days, but family begins arriving today... this minute actually... so the party officially starts now!

You're invited...

Party where you stand, sit, or lay...

Have a shot for me....

Hug yourself for me...

SCREAM for me...

BECAUSE WE DID IT!!!! 

WOOHOO!!!!!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

On Writing a Thesis, Part 5

It's due today.

At noon.

I realized yesterday- on my unexpected 7 hour drive- that the problem is that I would not/will not be unwillingly broken... tamed... molded... groomed.

Not then, not now, hopefully not ever.

Hopefully I will continue to be me- whoever that is- until they lay me in the ground.

Whatever cultural/academic assimilation occurs, it will be with my consent. Of course there are bits of you that are lost before you even realize... and some socialization is inevitable, and good... but this machine does not get to swallow me whole.

My self-awareness is like a broken cog in the wheel and they're trying to fix their machine.

I understand.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Thesis Status

Purgatory.

At least I'm closer.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

On Writing a Thesis is Midwifery School, Part 3

I'm in hell. 

Seriously.

But I will soon be leaving for heaven.




Thursday, April 30, 2009

WAIT There's More

I'm happy. Very, very, happy.

Ok, that's all. :o)

Comprehensive Exam

I took and passed my comprehensive exam last week.

Relief.

I sat in my last class of nursing/midwifery school... ever... last week. 

Bliss.

Some folks were nostalgic, some sad, some tired, some indifferent. I fall into the "tired" category. As we sat listening to presentations and sharing our thoughts with faculty about this experience, I realized that I had left, mentally, long ago. Home, for me, was already waiting. I couldn't wait to get back to the man. Back to my apartment. My bed. My new city.  I will finish my thesis over the next couple of days, and then I'll be done. One of my classmates summed it best: "I'm getting my MSN, and no matter what happens after this, no one can take that away from me." Ditto.

I'm sitting here trying to apply for jobs. It's weird. I apply for random jobs, so far only one them as a midwife. One as an RN. One as a secretary. One for the federal government. After midwifery being my life for three years... it's like I want a break from it, I don't want anything to do with it.... I'm kind of burnt out.  Also, midwifery is not really like I thought it'd be. I have yet to give comprehensive care to a woman from conception to birth. I never got to catch the baby of a woman I met more than once or twice. Most babies I caught were to women I had never met. This isn't what imagined for my life when I went into it, so it's been a little weird trying to re-imagine midwifery and my place in it. There's still a place or two that I'd work as a full scope midwife, so all is not lost, but I'm definitely broadening my career outlook. I'm also thinking about working in environments that are friendly for the "trying to conceive" life we're going to be entering... and sadly, ironically, midwifery isn't always the best career for that!?!? 

And on top of it all, I'm always looking for a doctoral program... but I'd also like to buy a home before I do that ( I know that sounds backwards since technically I might find a really great school in another part of the country, but basically I want to be completely settled before going back to school... I'm sick of apartments, sick of moving, sick of starting over, and if that means I will have to choose a local school, so be it.)

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Exam Week

I'm supposed to be studying for my comprehensive exam, but really I can't even get into a groove. Burnout is here and settled. I feel like if I don't know it by now, after 3 years of school, I'm not going to know in the next two days, and the best thing I can do for myself is relax. I miss the blogsphere. I miss writing. I miss my life of long ago, lol. I applied for one CNM job that I'm not expecting to get. And one RN job that I really thought I was a good candidate for, but never got a call back.

I need to apply to much more, but I really am not sure I want to spend more time doing full scope midwifery just yet... integration was amazing, but also very, very tiring and even at 3/4 the schedule of a real midwife, I don't think I could keep up that pace for very long... 

Ciarin, (and the rest of you ;o) how in the world do you do it?

Monday, April 13, 2009

It's Coming

It's been months, I know. And I'm sorry. I really am.
But this is hard. 
Period.
This is my last week of integration. 14 loooong weeks coming to an end. 
I just finished looking at the feedback from my thesis draft.
And it hit me...
I might actually do this...
I might actually graduate from this institution...
Maybe some people read that and thought, "well, duh." But I tell you I still only halfway believe I'm even here... so this... this is just
A lot to process.
I think about it and I get teary, my heart beats fast, and I have to take deep breaths and tell myself it's not over yet... that I haven't done it... yet...
But by the grace of God, it's coming...
One day soon I'm not going to have to talk myself down off the excitement ledge... I'm gonna jump head first into blissful self rejoicing so strong that I forget my own name.
Oh yes. 
It's coming.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Looking Back: Week 1 of Integration

This is pulled from my electronic journal. This is how my first week went:

Monday: L&D 8 to 11:15PM. Triaged three women in the AM with the same due date who were all post dates, 2 were teens in active labor, and the other was not in labor but wanted to check on her baby. One of the teens kept getting into it with the nurse (who was not nice to her and so I really didn't blame her) but the final straw was when she kept asking her to take her to the bathroom (she was hooked up to IV) and the nurse kept avoiding her (She admitted that she didn't like going into the patients room because the "little girl" had a "very bad attitude and an even worse mouth") and this girl just got out the bed, stood next to it and peed all over the floor. I could not believe the whole thing. I went in to talk to her and she said "I was not going to pee on myself, then she woulda left me in the bed laying in it." It was just a crazy situation. I was laughing with the nurses saying "well, welcome to integration hospital!" and they said "oh you aint seen nuthin yet!" and I thought, omg. I ended up delivering her and the other teen from the morning triages. (15 and 16yrs old) The lady who was also post dates and wanted to check on her baby was from the continent and lives with her cousin and his wife while she takes her last class here in the US. The entire rest of her family is back home. She did not want to be induced, but ended up staying for induction. She cried and cried and cried because her family back home was telling her not to be induced, to leave the baby alone and let it come on it's own. But then while she was hooked up to the monitors she was having decels, so of course we wanted to keep and induce her. I felt for this woman. Here she is, her cousin's wife dropped her off at the hospital, no one was going to be with her in labor or for the birth. She hadn't eaten since 5pm the previous day. She did not want to be induced and could recite the cascade of interventions that she was worried about, and I couldn't even pretend that it wouldn't happen. But, it was so nice to see the midwife and the doctor work together to help this woman. They are from the same part of the continent and so they came in together and talked about cultural customs and how they understood the pressure she was under. They talked about tradition vs the American way of doing things, and helped her figure out what to say to her family back home. The conversation happened in English, French, and their native tongue. The four of us in this tiny room together going over the risks/benefits of induction, still birth info, showing her the strip, asking about her needs, reassuring her that we weren't going to leave her, and just an overall understanding that were in this together. I was so happy to be able to witness it and be a part of it. She delivered vaginally the next day.

The other lady I delivered was a multip who came over from the clinic at 6cms. She was 5'2" and having her second VBAC. The baby came out fine, but then the placenta stuck. After about 30 minutes, she started to look a little shocky- basically pale, and we realized that her last H/H was like 8.9 and 25! We opened fluids, lowered the head of the bed , and called the MD stat. The MD tried to see if she could get it out (light manual removal) but couldn't (and the woman didn't have any pain med left- she was feeling everything!) and so then there was this big rush to get an interpreter phone because the doctor couldn't take her back to OR without informed consent for the anesthesia and hysterectomy she thought she might need (basically the doc felt that the placenta was probably stuck on the old c-section scar and she was going to try to really manually remove it but she would have to anaesthetise the patient, and if she couldn't get it out, she would have to have a hysterectomy) This probably would have been a lot scarier if we hadn't have just passed off the patient and went straight to our other patient who was pushing in another room! I had also done postpartum rounds during the shift, so by the time 11pm rolled around I was exhausted and ready to cry.

I was also upset that I really hadn't been prepared, like didn't have the experience of managing more than one patient at a time. Everything had to be done so fast and there were so many women to check on and strips to read and details to keep straight that I was really overwhelmed.

Tuesday: All day in the clinic connected to the hospital. Another long day. 34 patients showed up. The midwife said that it was a lot, even for her, so she called over to the hospital to ask the midwife on call if she could come help. Well she had three women in labor so she couldn't leave. I felt a little better knowing that the midwife herself felt a little flustered. I don't like how the clinic operates, but I guess this is what it's like at a high volume place. Women are given a number and called back by that number, never their names. She said this is not how midwives like to practice, afterall, this is why we went to midwifery school in the first place, to not practice this way! But this is how it is, you just have to work with it. The RNs do all the teaching- you write in the plan of the soap note what you want them to teach the woman before she leaves. You only have time to do leopolds, fundal height, and fetal heart tones. Also paps, GBS, etc.- the clinical exam stuff. Everything else, the nurses do. The MAs stay in the room with you and hand you everything so that it goes faster, and basically rush you to keep you on schedule. By the end of the day, again, I was exhausted. The midwife apologized for having to feed me to the wolves, but basically I was in shock. We both saw patients at the same time (she in her room, me in mine) and other times I saw patients with her in the room if it was something I didn't know how to do or couldn't find. It was crazy, and I did not feel like I was giving good or safe care, but I do know that I was doing the exact same thing she was doing. Also, almost every patient speaks spanish only. I swear I just can't get away from this. I'm telling myself that there's a reason this keeps happening. The only good thing is that they have multiple translators on site, and they come to you literally within a minute of asking for them, much better than those damn phones!

Wednesday: similar to Tuesday, except it was all GYN/Family planning and I only had a half day, which was lovely.

Thursday: Call- similar to Monday, except I had even more PP rounds to do, and one of my births was in the birth center!!! It was actually almost a waterbirth but she had light mec on AROM and you can deliver in the tub if you have mec stained fluid. So, she delivered in the bed and something funky happened with the cord after it was cut- blood sprayed everywhere! (even though both clamps were still on) The midwife said the cord snapped, but I couldn't tell how or where. It was really nice to see a birth in the center with the woman laboring in the jacuzzi. It was so much calmer, and the midwife seemed so much more like a midwife. It was also a beautiful birth because of the woman. She was this dreadheaded woman with this dreadheaded man for a partner. She was spiritual and really into symbolism. She had prayed the whole pregnancy that this particular midwiwife would be on when she came in (the practice has 'double digits' of midwives in it, so you never know) so she was really happy to have her there. Plus she was in nursing school and wanted to go to midwifery school so she was actually happy to have me there too and we talked about what midwifery school is like. Then, her partner had a friend who was struck and killed by a truck the night before, so they had talked about how with death comes life, and her partner's best friend was having a baby at the same time in the other part of L&D. The woman was also excited that she was having her baby on MLKs birthday in this year of Obama. It was just really good energy all around. Again a room full of women of color (the nurse was from India) feeling the love. As you can see, there have been good moments mixed in with all the scariness.

But it has been scary.

I feel underprepared by my school, and this doesn't feel like IP at all. All of a sudden my hand skills at birth SUCK. And per usual, they ask me stuff I feel like I should know but dont. Plus I really miss electronic charting- writing soap notes fast has been rough. Plus I think I work too many hours. I can see myself getting burnt out here very quickly.

Early morning tomorrow, again, going to bed!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Mondays Are Always Long

My day started off with the pleasant surprise of hearing "we no longer bulb suction babies."  It was music to my ears. It has been a real struggle for me to remember to bulb suction babies on the perineum or after delivery, especially when they are already crying. 
When I arrived on L&D this morning, there was a multip near fully.  I and the midwife introduced ourselves and informed her that were going to take care of her because her doctor was in the middle of a c/section.  She was happy with that, as she was a VBAC and thought she had a better chance with us. (Even though she was already almost fully, there was still possibility for a c-section because we were worried about shoulder dystocia- her last baby was 8lbs 2oz and born by c/s after she couldn't push it past zero station... I don't know if they tried a vacuum or not... but the point is my EFW was 9lbs for this baby, and the mom agreed that it felt bigger than her last baby... so, in short, we weren't out of the woods yet.)  Her doctor popped in after finishing the c/s and stayed to help with the delivery.  This was my first time catching a baby with a doc instead of a midwife.  Mom and doc joked about how the doc said she wasn't going to get to VBAC, but the patient had insisted all along that she would wait till very close to delivery to come in and that YES, she would be having a VBAC and yes she would be able to push out this baby.  She arrived at the hospital at 8cm. :o) She said she was not getting an epidural because she wanted to be able to "push right." I love determined women!
Eventually she gave birth to a 8 pound 12oz baby over an intact perineum, without any sign of a shoulder dystocia.  This particular doc did a lot of perineal massage and puckering, which was hard for me to be get into, but it went smoothly.  The patient and doc joked some more about mom getting her way, baby latched on soon thereafter, and I cleaned up mom and headed to my other mama.
My other mama also had a "big" baby, and this time the baby did get a little stuck.  We ended up having to do McRoberts and suprapubic pressure... but didn't call it a shoulder dystocia. That happens quite a bit it seems... midwives hesitant to call SD... instead saying snug shoulders or mild shoulder, etc.  Lately it seems like often women have been completely quitting their pushing efforts after they deliver the baby's head... I have been told to put gentle downward traction on baby's head by the midwife, only for her to try it herself and see that the baby isn't coming- even in the cases where it isn't a shoulder dystocia, the body isn't coming because the mama has quit pushing!  We end up practically pulling these babies out.  This baby was also over 8 pounds.
My last patient was a woman was a nearly AMA primip I admitted but would not be delivering for a while.  She was just getting into active labor when I left: 5-6cm/80%/0 station. She had a questionable pelvic shape, so everyone began watching her closely, I look forward to seeing how it goes for her.
I then had 2 postpartum patients to round on.  Both were well and breast-feeding successfully. :o)
I've caught a lot of babies since integration started.  I usually average 2 per shift.  When I think of the suggested number of catches for competency, I am so shocked that I've surpassed them.  There are people who graduate with the number of babies I've caught... how scary! 
Today the midwife told me that the goal for my last week before spring break is for her to stop gowning and gloving up.  She expects to sit back and watch me do the deliveries... by myself... "postpartum hemorrhage, shoulder, whatever."  
No pressure.
Sigh.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Integration: Week 1

This is post 1 of my 14 in 14:

ETA: oh man, it didn't work... theres something wrong with the friggin formatting of my journal entries... sigh.

I'm going to repost in a new page...

Stunted. The Cure: 14 in 14


I am a stunted blogger.  
I remember searching for so long for integration blogs.  I wanted to read about what integration was like before I stepped into the fire.  I found like, one, which didn't turn out to be much about integration at all.  I had grand plans of being that blog.  "I will write it" I told myself... so that when someone else looks, they will find it.  Well, I've written hardly anything.  Maybe that's what a real integration blog looks like.... empty space.  Space where one would write if she could think.  Space where one would tell all her birth stories, and glorious tales of crazy times in L&D and the clinic, if only she could find the time.  Space where one could purge her fears and accomplishments, if she actually had time to really process them. Space where one would give helpful hints and tips, if only she could find the confidence to think she had something worth sharing.
Oh if only there were the energy.  I am now convinced that anyone who has time to maintain a blog while in integration is a wonderwoman.  So Morag should be considered SUPERwonderwoman because she's doing it while also nurturing a baby in the belly. She just finished her "integration" and I enjoyed reading about her adventures.  You'll enjoy reading from beginning to end. 
I am trying to commit to 14 posts in 14 days... basically a post a day for the rest of February.  I don't want to look back on integration and not have a record of what I did.  I have been writing about it off and on for personal use, but I want something here, too.  I'm going to de-identify some of the stuff I already wrote and post it as part of my 14 in 14.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Paperwork

I'm drowning in it.  There's a mountain of paperwork required for my class every week, and it's soooo... ugh.  There's also a massive amount of paperwork involved in being a hospital midwife, too.  It seems... outrageous!
Maybe it will be slow enough for me to write a little something more substantial later...

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Thesis, What Next, Recession

I have a rare Wednesday off and lucky me I get to work on my thesis. (sarcasm, folks) I used to love it, but now I hate it.  I have a few more people to interview, that always brightens my feelings about the project. Maybe I'll start with that. Mostly I'm sick of writing, sick of reading, sick of looking at it as it barely exists.  It's also very frustrating to keep writing something that people critique so closely.  That's all I can say about it.  It's so entirely frustrating.
People in my class are starting to look for jobs.  I started a long time ago.  It's how I chose my integration site.  I picked a place I wanted to work at.  I don't think they'll be hiring this year though because they just hired someone who will start next month (she just passed her boards, yay for her)  So maybe they'll want me, maybe they wont.  Maybe I won't want them, lol.  Who knows.  My point is, I'm not really worried right now. I am actually surprised by how unworried I am.  I have never been one to be too, too worried about finding a job... I always seem to find something.  I have a large skill set and interview well.  But I'm not really looking right now because I have no idea what I want to do in 6 months.  That's so not like me.  Well, the truth is that I know exactly what I want to do (live in a cottage on the beach in the south of France) but since that's not happening, I have no idea what I want to do, lol.  The midwife who precepted me on Monday's shift gave me lots of advice (she is an alum of my school) about marketing myself and about what to do/where to work if I don't want to be a midwife right away (like if I want to be a L&D RN or a GYN only provider, etc) and about how she went about choosing where to live and making it work with her husband, etc.  It was really good to hear a midwife talk so openly about these things.  It was also good to hear a midwife say "you might not want to be a midwife right out of school if the timing isn't right, and the other options are just as good" and not be freaked, thinking OMG she doesn't think I'm ready. (She followed it all up with "You'll be ready, you're going to be great" and some side comments about how the practice likes to hire those they've trained themselves) I'm still trying to convince myself that I want to live in this area for the next few years.  As the economy flounders, I am more and more tempted to move to a place with a much lower cost of living.
The economy is really hitting poor people hard.  Every time I see the news about the bail out and where the money is going I'm infuriated.  In a whole morning of clinic I didn't have one patient with appropriate weight gain.  I had several patients who've lost weight... and they're not in the first trimester with nausea and vomiting, nor are they obese benefitting from better diets.  These are women of a normal BMI without any income or one-earner incomes of 12-16,000/year.  Women who are getting a large portion of their food from WIC. Women in the second and third trimesters, losing weight... total weight gains of 7,8,9,13 pounds over the course of a pregnancy.  Women measuring significantly "size smaller than dates" with accurate dating.  Women we must send for untrasounds they cant afford (and likely wont get) because they aren't eating enough. Women who flat out admit that they aren't eating enough.  And we ran out of our free vitamins, so we have women who have not taken witamins for 6 weeks.  I keep writing prescriptions, telling them that they can fill them for $4 at Target or Walmart.  
newFNP and lesbonurse are seeing it too.
I'm looking forward to a 3-way chat this afternoon with my girls, and for the man to come home saying "I got the job."

Monday, February 2, 2009

Monday Mornings

suck.


It came too fast. No patients on the board in L&D. This can be good or bad

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Time

passes by slowly at the hospital and clinic, fast on the weekends, and even faster in blogland. I have been gone a long time from my blog. I'm tired and overwhelmed with integration and my thesis. There's so much I could write if I didn't spend every free moment eating, writing on other people's blogs, logging onto facebook, or simply sleeping. Already Saturday night is here. That means tomorrow is Sunday, and the next day is Monday. Monday. Back to integration. One never really leaves though I guess. The first three weeks of integration were tough, but still I did it. I had every intention on writing about it often, but since I'm living it, I never want to spend any extra minutes talking about it. Honestly, I just want it to end. I'm tired. I don't think it's midwifery. I think I'm just smack dab in the middle of a severe case of senioritis that is compounded by the fact that I've been in school nonstop for the last... six years. OMG. I didn't realize that it's been six (goin on seven now) freakin years straight. No wonder I'm exhausted. Just plain burnt out. This is the explanation for why I have vivid, relentless daydreams about working as a temp answering phones, setting appointments, or typing documents. I just want to sit down. Rest. Work. Get a check. And go the hell home. Preferably before it gets dark. No one quizzing me. No panic at not knowing the answer. No extreme thinking necessary. No studying after work. No taking it home with you, to bed with you, in your dreams. Of course I want to sleep. I've been at this for 6 freaking years. The bureaucracy, the smiling, the bullshit. Ahh. Academia. Fill in this bubble, jump this hoop, pay this fee. No, no, no, leave who you were over... there. See, I'm trying to show you the way... this way, this is what you want, this is what we need.

But I'm sitting here wondering, how in the hell did I get here?

All as time passes me by.

I've been catching babies. It's harder than I ever, ever imagined it would be.  I didn't think it'd be easy, but I definitely didn't think it'd be this hard.  When I read the blogs of homebirthing midwives, there is such calm. It all seems so normal. So very different than what I'm learning. I try to tell myself to stop comparing, homebirth and hospital birth... apples to oranges, really.  Because I'm at a high volume hospital and midwifery practice, I often manage multiple patients at once. For example, on my first day, I caught as many babies as I did my whole first semester of midwifery school... and I caught them in a matter of hours. Yeah. Granted it really isn't that many, but I was shocked and scared and thinking, what the hell kind of midwifery is this? I know this is what it's like in high volume settings with low resources. But I had no idea that this was also the case for midwives here working regular hours at"regular ol' hospitals." I often find myself managing inductions, triage, and births simultaneously, then rounding on all the postpartum patients.  I find myself thinking, I couldn't do this for real, all day, all week. I can see the bright red burnout sign before I even start.  I am 10 times more interested in group prenatal care now then I was before I experienced what a true high volume clinic is like. I have never seen group prenatal care in action, but I know it must be better to get 12 women together in a room for 2 hours than to try to see the same twelve individually in the same amount of time- leaving you 10 whopping minutes per patient. 



Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Integration Status

I'm tired. Dead on my feet. That's about all.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Winding Down and Orientation

It's really hard to embrace the fact that my vacation is winding down. This morning I had a meeting with the midwifery practice to learn more about my schedule, the practice and what's expected. Early this week, my main preceptor emailed me and said that for Monday (my first day on the L&D floor) I needed to "bring a lab coat and wear comfortable shoes." Today I found out why. Busy + poorly designed. Here are the stats:

L&D rooms: 10
A multiple room triage cluster
PP rooms (unknown, but two floors)
A Birth Center Suite (this is awesome, by the way)

Now, this isn't a very large maternity ward (well PP is kinda large, but still) However, it's a very busy practice... in fact the practice has multiple offices. I would say that at sometimes 100 births a month, they qualify as high volume. So, although there aren't a lot of rooms, there are a lot of patients, and the layout is kinda all over the place (different corridors, part of PP is on a different floor, etc) There are a lot midwives on the schedule for this month, and they provide 24/7 coverage to their patients. My schedule for this month is usually two 12hr call shifts and one and a half clinic days per week. Sometimes I have a 24hr call shift and one clinic day. I have never done a real 24hr call shift before... this will be interesting (I have been on call for 24hrs before, but not required to be in the hospital all that time) I like the fact that to be "on call" is to show up for a full shift. No waiting for the call, no getting up in the middle of the night- just show up at 8am for your shift. Period. Because it is so hard to learn and adjust to different midwives schedules, I am trying to stick with 2, maybe 3, midwives during integration, but of course it may not work out that way. I also think this is important because you want to have stability and someone who can accurately measure your progress every week. I am also going to try to stick to one main clinic because the private office and county clinic have different procedures and honestly it's hard enough learning one set. 

I got a badge this morning and a list of required tasks (HIPPA, etc) to do this weekend. My badge says "Ivy1 Medical Student" which really made me cringe. Now not only will everyone know what school I go to, but they will think I'm a med student. sigh. I have a drug test scheduled in two weeks.

Things I Left Feeling Good About:
  • The midwife that oriented me was really nice and wanted to put me on her own schedule for the next few weeks
  • I will get plenty of experiences both in clinic and on L&D
  • Waterbirth (woohoo!)
  • The midwife call room- very cozy and all ours!
  • Plenty of hours to choose from when making my schedule
Things That Left Me Hyperventilating:
  • The 34hr work week
  • The fact that this is it
I guess it's good that the good list is longer than the omg! list.

The plan is to study very casually this weekend... all weekend.