Category: Uncategorized

  • Orthopedic Logbook Reloaded

    After so many rounds of theme changing and theme hacking, I ended with this really  “simple” and “neat”   layout thanks to 3Roads Media. I’m immensely happy with it.  Don’t be fooled however. This  theme   is “superb” with the right enhancements. It’s clarity and simplicity is second to none.

    Even with this simple layout, there’s a bit of how to just so you won’t get lost while navigating within my blog. It also eases out your way on getting what you need with a few clicks.

    I’m pretty sure it’s just my juicy posts that you’re interested. And nothing else. (I offer no freebies for now..) So I made it simple for you.

    First, subscribe to my blog and get every post I have here right in your inbox.  Enter your email  in the subscription box in the sidebar. Or if you use an RSS reader, click the upper right hand most menu that says “RSS” and you’ll be subscribed after a few more clicks. If your particularly interested in a topic, do a search in my top sidebar. Or scan through my archives, my categories or the tags all easily accessible in the sidebar.

    If you find the post title you wanted, all you need to do is click on the large title font and presto you’ll on the article you wanted. If your fonts look weird, that is probably because you don’t have a flash player installed in your pc or browser. This theme implemented an SIFR font enhancer to highlight words and readability. SIFR needs a flash player . Go get it here and install it now, or you’re actually missing (99%) what’s the best of online contents.

    Of course I would appreciate it  if you leave a comment in my articles. You don’t need to be logged in to do that but I prefer you do to avoid spamming and know you better. If you don’t have a gravatar, grab one. That will put a face to that mystery icon in the comments. Please be patient if your comment isn’t approved instantly, cause I may not be online to do that ASAP. But yes, I will attend to it a soon as I am online.

    Again, I’m urging you, to subscribe to my blog, via emails, or through an RSS to get my post faster. You can also follow this blog on Facebook, on twitter and on so many other social networks you like. Just click the button and the rest is given to you.

  • I am sorry…

    My sincere apologies, to you, dear readers and followers.

    1. For not having posted anything new in this blog for quite sometime.
    2. For transferring my site url without the necessary ‘temporary redirect page” and thus confusing you all.
    3. For messing up this blog and its layout several times, that even me the author,  got lost in the site navigation .
    4. Leaving the blog rounds temporarily in mess and its publications schedules unmet…

    I have transferred this blog,  from a free subdomain platform Blogger, to a self hosted WordPress blog The Orthopedic Logbook (https://remomd.com/blog).

    The clamor for transferring this blog to a better platform is getting louder. The so many features I need to suit my readers is just not available on free versions. Or I’d consume more time hacking just to do a run around for this features. Transferring entails time, funds and a lot of layout tweaking.  Time, that  often interfered with my regular job. And funds? It all came from my shallow pocket. The tweaking though ate most of my time, as I am new to wordpress.

    I realized though that even as blogging is as important to me,  readers and subscribers need to know the whys and what the heck of my sudden but  “temporary” disappearance in the medical blogosphere.  And I hope, I have not lost your trust and confidence in me and my blog.

    I hope with my new home and eye friendly layout, it will be easier for you to get hold of my articles, navigate through my blog . I will tackle how to navigate through my blog in my next post.

    Again, my sincere apologies and thank you for your continued patronage of my blog, The Orthopedic Logbook!

  • Blog rounds season 2 hosting schedule

    Geez, a not so easy job. Coming up with a blog rounds hosting schedule is well, challenging. But, since I have no choice but to assign (any admin takers pls?) one host each week for the rest of TBR season two, I came up with this (not so genius)  list. I simply got the ordered host from the commentators’ list in this post.  Again, please be reminded of our hosting schedule and guidelines! (more…)

  • Haste makes waste, sometimes…

    There is one thing admirable with state ran health training institution- the constant struggle to an ideal, efficient, low cost, health care program. Residents in training are constantly hammered to provide the best health care at the least  possible cost both for the patient and the institution. This is typically a result of maximizing an undermanned and under budgeted, capacity filled government hospital. On the plus side, innovative care do evolve from these type of health training institutions. On the downside, devastating results sometimes happen because of shortcuts (treatment protocols outside of the accepted standards of care) that we were push to vis a vis the dwindling financial support and logistical problems.

    One of the more common dilemma we face is the timing of surgery. It is one of the more commonly debated factor that ultimately affects health care provision and utilization. An early surgery will simply equate to a lesser hospital cost for both the patient and the health care provider. The lesser time to surgery from admission, will result to a lesser hospital stay which in turn, lessens logistical utilization and expenses for both the patients and hospital. This should be the ideal situation.

    The problem lies with the accuracy of studies and the mix of factors needed to predict the “best” timing for surgery. Knowing the right mix of factors needed to achieve favorable results is quite uncertain. Timing of surgery studies are usually done on relatively ideal, controlled (developed world) health care facilities. Hospital setting and patient profiles rarely fit the situation where a third world surgeon is facing. Of course there is room for extrapolation or innovative standards of care. But that makes the predictability of results (of surgery) quite uncertain!

    Take this for example.

    A VA patient came in the ER 12 hours post injury with an open type II fracture of the medial malleolus and close lateral malleolar fracture . He was brought in from a far flung community with no previous medical or surgical intervention. His vital signs were stable and no other life threatening injuries were noted upon admission. After I saw the patient and his xrays, I talked to him, about the advantages and disadvantages of the different treatment options and surgical intervention for his type of injury. The options are basically between an emergency debridement plus open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) or just a debridement (repeated if necessary)  and delayed ORIF after possible infection is ruled out. Spending about an hour of explaining the risks and advantages to the patient, I got an answer like this one- “which do you think is the best doc?’.

    With all honesty, I mustered to say that personally, I would prefer the delayed ORIF since all the patient and injury factors (plus the delay in treatment) points to a greater risk of infection secondary to a skin breakdown. Surprisingly, he wasn’t convinced somehow, even after that lengthy explanation. He told me he understood the risks I’m explaining  but he really wanted to get out of the hospital ASAP for financial reasons. I don’t know if that was his real reason since he’s kind of without problems procuring his medications and stuff needed for surgery. The patient which seemed to be hurrying up, wanting an immediate fixation so he can go out of the hospital after the first OR. I couldn’t convince the patient and couldn’t get a consent either for a debridement only and delayed ORIF. He then asked to be transferred to another hospital somewhere else for treatement. I got no choice but to give a referral letter. I thought that was the last time I heard of that patient.

    Two months later, this patient showed up in my clinic, in crutches, with a draining sinus just below his medial malleolus. “Good afternoon doc” His previously fractured left ankle is warm and swollen. He couldn’t walk on it because of pain. His ankle is with peri-implant infection, an osteomyelitis, and probably septic ankle joint. He told me that the next day after I saw him in the ER before, he transferred to another hospital, insisted for that immediate ORIF and went home 2 days after his surgery. He never followed up with his surgeon. Still aghast at the turn of events for this patient, I was visibly distraught at the wasted extremity that needed more costly surgery now. I told the patient to go back to his surgeon and ask for advice and treatment. I sincerely told him I cannot treat him unless his other surgeon is away or will endorse him to me. The guy was devastated and was teary eyed when he left. That was the last time I saw that patient.

    Looking back, I empathized with that patient. I know he was trying to save up on cost. But in the long run, it cost him his ankle joint. That for me is a the worse you can get for a shortcut that seem so easy. I’m not saying this is what will happen in ALL of such cases. I have a few of my cases too, that I got away (meaning procedure went out well and patient was satisfied with the treatment) with such “shortcuts” (call it innovation for lack of term) because of logistics and patient’s financial concerns. My point is this: That the predictability of results for an ideal  timing of surgery is quite uncertain. The right mix of factors is often very elusive and are sometimes, based on patients or surgeon biases. They are too difficult to qualify in an academic sense.

    In the third world, undermanned and under buffeted  health care facility we’re practicing , chances are, we too are fraught with such dilemma. So, how do you handle such cases in your practice?

  • Townhouse blogging: Will it be for real?

    Here’s a spin of my epic reawakening.

    When I started blogging about health care issues a year ago, I restricted my so called “online journal” to personal nuances that rarely touch anything substantial beyond my own epidermis. It was easier back then, having to simply blurt out personal experiences in order to keep the curiosity of my readers. It was this curiosity that enabled some readers a window into the often chaotic and enigmatic life of medical students, physicians, residents and the tears and glitter that came with our job. Grey’s anatomy, Scrubbs and House MD entertained more viewers rather than offering realistic solutions to health care debacles. But they did succeed in bringing health care personnel into some different form of popularity.

    When I stumbled on foreign medical blogs that espoused critical thinking on health care issues that affect their system, I became deeply interested and got hooked. The realization in my situation was not something of a “late bloomer syndrome” or this epic, numbnut, out of touch physician. It was rather a realization that I too failed to acknowledge (and kept it that way for so long) there’s something screwed with our health care system but I walled in myself saying it wasn’t my business after all. I chose to be blind and remind blind to these imperfections believing I couldn’t effect some change.

    That soon changed as I went by writing about whats happening “inside the system” and reading what “outsiders”(distinction mine) say about my health care system. It’s simply too much to ignore. I couldn’t simply box in myself to personal nuances and leave others to rot for themselves. One could not simply close thy eyes to the worsening health concerns just because we can afford to salvage our privilege arse. Thus, I slowly drifted into an opinionated blogger that criticizes anything and everything thrown on our health care system and our lives as heath care providers.

    Even political ones.

    I may not have the soundest and most elaborate dissertations on health care issues nor I profess to offer the sanest solution to any of these pressing problems. I hope though, that I can create awareness, encourage readers to criticize, to participate in the discussion and to offer reasonable solutions to issues affecting their health. That, is essentially what became of my erstwhile “blog for glamor” attitude-an advocacy.

    Admitting this is rather not easy as it looks. Nitpicking issues that are far more complicated than syndromes in medicines is not an endpoint in solving these issues. Simple solutions to complicated issues are as elusive as finding a cure for cancer. Nonetheless, it is still possible. This is where I pin my hope. That after I put forth health care issues affront, invite a melee of discussions(townhouse discussions of Obama) to such issues, a simplistic and reasonable solution may come out and be implemented to address our most basic health concerns. It takes political will to do that, but that is outside my advocacy at the moment. I leave the politics side to my political readers.

    One thing I can promise my readers though, that I will continually read, challenge, criticize or applaud works that tend to improve our health care situation in general. Of course expect me to give a wrath whenever something else take our stride to down turns. We has had our enough of health care screw up, we need none more to hammer a coffin nail.

    So, shall we start a discussion?