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Internship & Residency
Managing Your Interns
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Dr.
Karl Newman
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For many residents, running a rounding team (consisting
of the resident and two interns, along with medical students, pharmacists,
and other personnel) represents their first experience in a managerial
setting.
Because these skills are not emphasized during
the medical education process, it's not uncommon for a resident to feel
ill-prepared for these new responsibilities.
This month, Q Fever!'s I&R correspondent, Dr. Karl Newman,
reveals his secrets of: Managing Your Interns.
Interns are great - they can be a resident's dream
come true if they're managed right, but... Watch out, a few wrong moves
and you're on your own! So take these tips to heart. Practice makes perfect!
It's kind of like what my old high school gym teacher
used to tell me:
You Can't Change Who You Are
Without New Shoes, A Good Map, And A Car
So without further a-do, here's all
you need to know about keeping your team running smoothly and peacefully!
1. Memorize Everyone's Names.
What?! Yeah. See, people don't
like being called a name that isn't really theirs. Think about it. If
someone called you Arthur, and your name was really Henry, would you think
that was friendly or right? So stop thinking only about yourself, and
start calling people by their real names.
2. Earn Their Respect.
Huh?!?! Of course! Earning respect
is one of the hardest things a new resident has to face, but it can also
be one of the most rewarding. Try this: Give your interns a dollar every
time they treat you like someone important. Pretty soon, they'll be bending
over backwards just to make sure you know how special you are! Just be
sure to set limits - no more than, say, fifty dollars a day per intern.
Otherwise you'll look like a dork!
3. Compliment Them Often
Whatzat??! Right again! It's
like this. When Beth does a nice job with her note, say "That's a
great note you wrote there, Beth. Much better than the one Andy wrote."
Make sure Andy's sitting nearby, so he can hear you! Then later, tell
Andy "You're the best intern I've ever had, much better than Beth,"
and make sure Beth hears every word of it. Later still, tell Beth "Andy
thinks you're a brown-noser," and tell Andy "Beth thinks you're
a spy for the now-defunct KGB," and tell Beth "Andy has a bad
case of head lice," and tell Andy "Beth is infertile and will
be forever and ever," and so on. Believe me, it works!
4. Give Them The Chance
Uhh... Wha??!? Yes. The Chance.
The chance to be on their own, free, free to do what is right, to do what
is moral and correct, to make mistakes, to live, to learn. So turn off
your pager. Go home. Sleep in. You think they need you? They'll be fine.
They need help? Sure they do. They'll get it. You relax. Watch TV. Surf
the web. Call your Mom. Internship? Over and done. Worries? You ain't
got none. You're a resident now. You deserve this. Say it again - You
deserve this... You deserve this.
Just tell 'em Dr. Karl sent ya!
Karl Newman, MD is a second-year
resident in Internal Medicine.

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