Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 9 | Page 30

OPINION DOCTORS' Lounge (continued from page 27) to her chest by putting his head down onto it, which made her blush. She looked as though she would live. We thought it was reflux (coffee/no food/hungover) but of course there were considerations of pulmonary embolus, and so the captain (who spoke only to Goetz) landed us at Heathrow, where a gruff am- bulance man came in, and spoke only to Goetz. I was female chopped liver, so I sat down and read my book. We never did hear how she was. In practice, each airline has ground-sup- port medical consultants and they primarily help the captain make the call. What we can do, up in the air, is use an app. It’s called AirRx and is a collaborative ef- fort, the brainchild of Dr. Raymond Bertino, an interventional radiologist and Clinical Professor of Radiology and Surgery at the University of Illinois College of Medicine. He and five other doctors, including ER docs and aerospace docs, invented this and – brilliantly – it’s designed to work when your phone/device is in Airplane Mode. The authors advise: review the app every time on the plane, when the crew is remind- ing you about the exits and the flotation devices. Know always that the cabin is a relatively hypoxic environment, especially for valley-dwellers like us, since its oxy- genation is equivalent to high-altitude, not the banks of the Ohio. If we are unused to breathing at altitudes between 6,000 and 8,000 feet and we are stricken, giving us two liters per minute is not enough - we need four. Remember that cabin pressurization will result in worsening of a pneumothorax or an air-filled bowel obstruction. One thing we should not do, if flying be- yond the continental US, is to make a formal pronunciation of death. Apparently, that opens up a legal can of worms that we do not want to be involved in. However, when I read this, I wondered how any doctor can say, “He looks sort of dead.” I think perhaps that might mean refusing to give an exact time and an exact reason. We should immediately tell the crew our qualifications, either take charge or help a person who is more qualified, ask for the emergency kit, and get one crew member to be our helper and go-between. We should tell the patient and the crew exactly and relatively rapidly what we think is wrong. In this day and age, the prospect of con- tagious infectious disease is a nightmarish one for all involved. We are cautioned to ask immediately for the universal precautions kit for ourselves and personnel involved and mask the patient if feasible. We should immediately inform the captain. If it looks bad, we should ask for patients to be moved back/away if that is at all possible. We should avoid, I would add, any note of hysteria. We should position the patient correctly either up or down as needed, and using the information in the 23 scenarios outlined, choose the equipment and medicines we need. For instance: for a breathing problem, this app reminds you how to take a history, how to do a focused exam, warns you of the signs of severe distress, and when to proceed to the cardiac/respiratory arrest scenario. It gives precise advice for which medicines. The app has concise listings for the usual availability of medicine and equipment on various airlines according to the regulations of each country. The AirRx app is most interesting read- ing, the psychiatric part in particular, and the obstetric part, which I hope to read as a bystander only and never a participant. But if I drew that short straw, I would read the app, take deep breaths, take my own pulse first, help that mother, and pray. Dr. Barry practices Internal Medicine with Norton Community Medical Associates-Bar- ret. She is a clinical associate professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Medicine. LAMENTATIONS OF THE Retired Physician John Lloyd, MD I often ponder (more often since my retirement) a quote attributed to the ancient Roman poet Virgil: “Optima dies…prima fugit” (the best days are the first to flee). When physicians of my generation discuss the current practice of medicine, they often arrive at a similar conclusion (although not as eloquent as Virgil), i.e. “The best days have flown.” I’m sure this is not a new or original revelation. 28 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE Every generation of physicians, no doubt, feel that their own generation has been the “golden age” of medicine. But nonetheless, there have been recent seemingly rapid and unsettling changes that dominate the conversation of older physicians who have continued the practice of medicine or who have recently retired: 1) loss of indepen- dence, 2) enslavement by computers, 3) be- ing shackled by insurance companies and governing bodies, 4) the increasing expec- tation for perfect treatment outcomes, (i.e. less than a perfect outcome appears to be unacceptable in today’s world), and 5) the dilemma resulting from expectations for the practitioner to deliver “state of the art” and evidence-based care with a minimal use of resources and in a minimal amount of time. As a result, whether real or imagined, some older physicians have concluded that it may