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Savvy Illness Sufferers
Intensify Efforts To Stay Well
Hospitalization rates plummet following arrival
of new interns
BOSTON, MA--With the arrival of thousands of well-meaning,
fresh-faced new medical professionals in the nation's teaching hospitals
last week, chronic disease sufferers across the nation are reportedly
taking extra care to comply with complex outpatient medication regimens.
To many, this tightening of compliance is directly
related to a fear of receiving medical care while the new interns are
getting "up and running".
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Sydney Palmello, CHF Sufferer
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"Yup, I'm takin' my Lasix, I'm takin my captopril",
said Sydney Palmello, a congestive heart-failure sufferer from Lexington,
MA. Mr. Palmello, who is well known to local physicians due to his love
of salty snack-foods, added "I gotta lay off those Fritos at least 'till
September, when the dust settles."
"Lord knows, I'm ready to go when my time comes,
but I don't want to check out just because some clown leaves the decimal
point out of my digoxin order."
"You know, they're all very cute, with those big,
wet, Bambi-eyes", said Miriam O'Connell, of Framingham, MA. "It's just
that the similarity to deers and fawns doesn't end there: they've got
the whole 'trapped in the headlights' thing going too."
O'Connell, a diabetic, is being extremely careful
with her diet and medication regimen. "The last thing I need is to be
in the emergency room with diabetic ketoacidosis, with one of those cuties
standing over me, flipping through a Washington Manual trying to figure
out the insulin-drip formula", she said Tuesday.
Dr. Mark Paulskey, President of the Interns and Residents
On-Call Association (IROCA), rejected the notion that medical care obtained
in teaching hospitals in July is of lesser quality than that obtained
later in the academic year.
"You know, I think it's a matter of trade-offs",
said Paulskey. While agreeing that the newly minted MD's are less likely
to formulate correct differential diagnoses, or prescribe correct dosages
of standard drugs, than other physicians, he noted that "they are way
more likely to ask about seat-belts and perform exhaustive family histories
during a medical admission than more senior colleagues."
Paulskey's comments were briefly interrupted by the
beeping of his shiny new pager.
"You can give... uh... C-c-c-colace?," said
Paulskey.
"The dose?...", he continued, flipping feverishly
through his Pocket Pharmacopoeia. "Can I get back to you on that?"

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