Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 4 | Page 29

DOCTORS’ LOUNGE great ER docs in Louisville; we have a long and honorable tradition of an intense, exacting, superbly professional Emergency Medicine residency here. A lot of them I know only from their voices on the phone. I have to go look them up in the GLMS mugbook to see them (or at least what they looked like in 1992). They are masters of the short, pithy presentation and recommendation of care. They call quickly when the patient is unstable and slowly when they are thoroughly completing the workup, to see if truly the person must stay, or can safely go. Certain voices make me smile and relax right away; new voices cause a tingle of anxiety. They know we rely on their judgment and that we immensely, absolutely and totally appreciate the hell out of them. I think of my stream of consciousness when I (like the other PGY-3 Medicine residents of many Grady eras) was the ranking doctor at night, in the MEC, alone, no faculty in sight. We had fellows of all stripes we could call; we could call our brethren; we relied immeasurably on the nurses. It was a live-fire exercise in fear, requiring immediate recognition, rapid action, and repeat. Our brains went, “Check, check, check. Right, right, right. Oops better call GI; check, check, check, check, admit, admit, admit, admit, admit, home, home, home. Oops, get Cardiology down here now!” The satisfaction came from know- ing, knowing, knowing, did the right thing, next, next, next. What haunted us was Not Knowing. Thankfully, my ER docs who call me do know. They should also know, we are all eternally grateful. I leave you with how they talk on the phone here: one answers, “Pronto.” One ends, on a descending scale of loudness, “CIAO, CIAo, Ciao, Ciao, ciao.” Dr. Barry practices Internal Medicine with Norton Community Medical Associates-Barret. She is a clinical associate professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Medicine. SURGICAL CREDENTIALING IN ENGLAND: M.B.B.S., F.R.C.S.; NOT M.D. Gordon Tobin, MD D ear Editor: I wish to correct errors in the published title of my remembrance of Robert Acland (Louisville Medicine 2016; 63(12):14). First, he was born in 1941, not 1921. Also, his medical degree was not M.D., but M.B.B.S., F.R.C.S., which are the usual credentials of English-trained surgeons. This variation from American post-nominal degrees confuses many, but much about medical history is revealed. Whereas medical school graduation in North America brings a doctorate of medicine (M.D.), the English equivalent is the paired degrees of bachelor of medicine and bachelor of surgery (Medicinae Baccalaureus, Baccalaureus Chirurgiae, abbreviated M.B.B.S., or variations such as M.B.Ch.B.). This dual degree does allow the English graduate to be called “doctor” as a medical practitioner, although not a recipient of a doctoral degree. Historically, the earliest North American colonial med- ical schools (Universities of Pennsylvania, Toronto, Maryland, Harvard and Columbia) followed this practice in the 18th century, but switched to the Scottish tradition of awarding M.D.s around the end of the colonial era. Throughout the former British Commonwealth, practices vary widely in post-nominal designation of medical school graduates. The designation F.R.C.S. (Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons) designates qualification to practice as a senior surgeon for those so trained and examined, such as Bob Acland. This dates back to the individual Royal Colleges of Surgeons in Edinburgh (chartered 1505), Ireland (chartered 1784), and London (chartered 1800). America’s F.A.C.S. (Fellows of the American College of Surgeons) carries forth this tradition. As current President of the American College of Surgeons, Louisville’s J. David Richardson, M.D., F.A