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A transition is coming. My fourth and final year of residency starts soon – meaning that from July 1, 2018, I’ll never again be on call overnight as a psychiatry resident. July 1 marks the end of 2 years as a PGY2 and PGY3, during which I’ve worked 60 overnight shifts.

In our residency program, the on-call shift is a continuation of daytime duties, and the experience is a formative physician-in-training/quasi-hazing process of care provision for 24 hours straight. Previously, I’ve recounted experiences from my overnight on-call shifts and reflected on the intensity of working with emotionally distressed individuals in the emergency department. I never thought I’d say it, but I will miss working in the middle of the night, particularly in the ED. In the small hours of the morning, the strange aura of hospital existence, and desperation of sickness isn’t washed out by daylight and the inhibitions of business hours.

Thomas Northcut/Thinkstock
Being on call is a fact of medical training. No doubt it makes us stronger, more experienced physicians, able to respond to challenging clinical experiences in a less-than-optimal environment. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t painful.

As part of yearlong monitoring research, I’ve asked my fellow residents at George Washington University, in Washington, to participate in a quality improvement survey. It collects information on the number of patients evaluated overnight while on call and also asks residents to rate their on-call experiences on an “emotional pain scale” with space for a qualitative comment. The emotional pain scale is a simple visual analog scale for pain, with a smiley face representing 0 pain and the sad face with tears representing the 10 out of 10, worst pain imaginable. Initially, the emotional pain scale seemed a lighthearted and somewhat silly way for residents to vent about their on-call experience. A year of data collection later, I consider the emotional pain scale an important acknowledgment to my fellow residents that being on call is physically and emotionally taxing.

At the 2018 American Psychiatric Association meeting in New York, I presented findings from this survey data, examining the quantitative information showing that sheer volume of patients correlates with higher emotional pain scores. But while compiling and analyzing the data for my presentation, I also found myself reading and rereading the comments left by my colleagues about their hardest nights. As I read, I reflected on my own 60 nights on call, and my personal experiences between the highs and lows of emotional pain.

As an homage to the educational and emotional power of being on call, I’d like to share a few vignettes from my years of overnight calls from across the emotional pain scale. (Key demographic details have been omitted to protect patients’ privacy.):

  • 0: There is no such thing as 0 emotional pain when asked to stay overnight in the hospital.
 

 

  • 1: This is a full night of sleep on the uncomfortable bunk beds in the GWU call room. On occasion, I’ve had a night with one consult. Only once in 2 years did I have a night in which not a single consult was called from the ED and all the patients on the psychiatric unit slept as soundly as I did.
  • 4: There’s a man I’ve seen in the ED seven times over the last 2 years. That’s more than 10% of my nights on call, so we’re well acquainted – though he has trouble remembering me. He’s an alcoholic, though I know the official diagnosis is alcohol use disorder–severe. His addiction is, indeed, severe; I’ve never seen him sober. Every time, he tells me how his wife is cheating on him, and he’s been depressed since his eldest son was killed in a shooting 10 years ago. He sits under a bridge and drinks liquor until he either goes home or to an ED. I feel for him. Several times, other residents and I have transferred him to a local detoxification unit with discharge to a 30-day drug rehab program. It doesn’t stick. The last time I evaluated him, I sent him home to his wife with a cab voucher. My emotional pain is equal parts pity and frustration over my ineffectual impact on his life. He, and others like him, used to cause me more emotional pain. Eventually, the pain is dulled.
    Dr. Jacqueline Posada
  • 5: The mean pain scale score of a GWU resident on call is 5.13. Analysis of the survey data showed the emotional pain score is correlated with the specific resident on call, and my personal average is 5.04. From the way residents talk about being on call, I expected the mean pain scale to be higher. There is no vignette for the mean score; I think of it as all the unremarkable calls blurred together.
  • 8: Emotional pain rises with a fraught clinical scenario. One weeknight, I had to involuntarily commit a young lawyer who was psychotic yet adept at hiding it. The lawyer was brought into the ED by police after his brother in Chicago called them to his apartment. The patient had called the brother while standing on his 10th-floor balcony talking nonsensically about conspiracy theories and why he needed to end his life to save the world. In the ED, the patient denied every single part of the story. When I called the brother for collateral, his distress moved me as a both sibling and psychiatrist. The lawyer denied the story up and down, called his brother a liar and the favorite child, and refused to sign into the psychiatric hospital voluntarily. I felt I had no choice but to place him in an involuntary hold. It was a long and busy night, and every time I walked past his ED bay, he’d yell, “Is this the face of a crazy man? I know the law!” I tried to put myself in his position and that of his brother who had called the police. Eight is the emotional pain of involuntarily committing someone whose story isn’t black and white. Eight is the pain of exercising authority and beneficence over patient autonomy.
 

 

  • 10: I was consulted to evaluate a woman for suicidal ideation whose mother had coded and died in the ED an hour before. When the woman was told of her mother’s death, she crumpled to floor, screaming she wanted to die to join her mother. In the tumult, ED staff thought she was running out of the hospital to jump into traffic. She was held in the ED involuntarily until she could be evaluated for safety by psychiatry – me. When I entered her hospital room, she was quietly weeping, whispering: “I want my mom. I want my mom.” I wanted to cry, too. I sat with her in silence for a few minutes and offered my condolences. Yet, as the consultant, I had a job to do: I needed to complete a risk assessment. My voice caught as I explained that I was here to assess her for suicidal thoughts and plans. She looked at me like I was crazy. I felt crazy. I acknowledged the risk of suicide and her expressed desire to join her mother in death. I asked the questions quickly and gently. She shook her head to all my questions and told me she just wanted to go home. I met her daughters in the waiting room who were caught up in grief over the combination of their grandmother’s death and their mother’s reaction. They seemed certain that their mother had not wanted to die, and we agreed it was a situation of the wrong reaction in the wrong place. The daughters agreed to take her home and watch her all night. This is the only 10 I’ve experienced on the emotional pain scale. I felt shame and confusion as I struggled to reconcile my obligation as a psychiatrist, and my true desire to give that woman a hug and send her home without a battery of questions at perhaps her most vulnerable moment.

Dr. Posada is a third-year resident in the psychiatry and behavioral sciences department at George Washington University, Washington. She completed a bachelor’s degree at GWU. For 2 years after her undergraduate education, she worked at the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases studying HIV pathogenesis. Dr. Posada completed her medical degree at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Her interests include public psychiatry, health care policy, and health disparities, and she plans to pursue a fellowship in consult liaison psychiatry.

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A transition is coming. My fourth and final year of residency starts soon – meaning that from July 1, 2018, I’ll never again be on call overnight as a psychiatry resident. July 1 marks the end of 2 years as a PGY2 and PGY3, during which I’ve worked 60 overnight shifts.

In our residency program, the on-call shift is a continuation of daytime duties, and the experience is a formative physician-in-training/quasi-hazing process of care provision for 24 hours straight. Previously, I’ve recounted experiences from my overnight on-call shifts and reflected on the intensity of working with emotionally distressed individuals in the emergency department. I never thought I’d say it, but I will miss working in the middle of the night, particularly in the ED. In the small hours of the morning, the strange aura of hospital existence, and desperation of sickness isn’t washed out by daylight and the inhibitions of business hours.

Thomas Northcut/Thinkstock
Being on call is a fact of medical training. No doubt it makes us stronger, more experienced physicians, able to respond to challenging clinical experiences in a less-than-optimal environment. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t painful.

As part of yearlong monitoring research, I’ve asked my fellow residents at George Washington University, in Washington, to participate in a quality improvement survey. It collects information on the number of patients evaluated overnight while on call and also asks residents to rate their on-call experiences on an “emotional pain scale” with space for a qualitative comment. The emotional pain scale is a simple visual analog scale for pain, with a smiley face representing 0 pain and the sad face with tears representing the 10 out of 10, worst pain imaginable. Initially, the emotional pain scale seemed a lighthearted and somewhat silly way for residents to vent about their on-call experience. A year of data collection later, I consider the emotional pain scale an important acknowledgment to my fellow residents that being on call is physically and emotionally taxing.

At the 2018 American Psychiatric Association meeting in New York, I presented findings from this survey data, examining the quantitative information showing that sheer volume of patients correlates with higher emotional pain scores. But while compiling and analyzing the data for my presentation, I also found myself reading and rereading the comments left by my colleagues about their hardest nights. As I read, I reflected on my own 60 nights on call, and my personal experiences between the highs and lows of emotional pain.

As an homage to the educational and emotional power of being on call, I’d like to share a few vignettes from my years of overnight calls from across the emotional pain scale. (Key demographic details have been omitted to protect patients’ privacy.):

  • 0: There is no such thing as 0 emotional pain when asked to stay overnight in the hospital.
 

 

  • 1: This is a full night of sleep on the uncomfortable bunk beds in the GWU call room. On occasion, I’ve had a night with one consult. Only once in 2 years did I have a night in which not a single consult was called from the ED and all the patients on the psychiatric unit slept as soundly as I did.
  • 4: There’s a man I’ve seen in the ED seven times over the last 2 years. That’s more than 10% of my nights on call, so we’re well acquainted – though he has trouble remembering me. He’s an alcoholic, though I know the official diagnosis is alcohol use disorder–severe. His addiction is, indeed, severe; I’ve never seen him sober. Every time, he tells me how his wife is cheating on him, and he’s been depressed since his eldest son was killed in a shooting 10 years ago. He sits under a bridge and drinks liquor until he either goes home or to an ED. I feel for him. Several times, other residents and I have transferred him to a local detoxification unit with discharge to a 30-day drug rehab program. It doesn’t stick. The last time I evaluated him, I sent him home to his wife with a cab voucher. My emotional pain is equal parts pity and frustration over my ineffectual impact on his life. He, and others like him, used to cause me more emotional pain. Eventually, the pain is dulled.
    Dr. Jacqueline Posada
  • 5: The mean pain scale score of a GWU resident on call is 5.13. Analysis of the survey data showed the emotional pain score is correlated with the specific resident on call, and my personal average is 5.04. From the way residents talk about being on call, I expected the mean pain scale to be higher. There is no vignette for the mean score; I think of it as all the unremarkable calls blurred together.
  • 8: Emotional pain rises with a fraught clinical scenario. One weeknight, I had to involuntarily commit a young lawyer who was psychotic yet adept at hiding it. The lawyer was brought into the ED by police after his brother in Chicago called them to his apartment. The patient had called the brother while standing on his 10th-floor balcony talking nonsensically about conspiracy theories and why he needed to end his life to save the world. In the ED, the patient denied every single part of the story. When I called the brother for collateral, his distress moved me as a both sibling and psychiatrist. The lawyer denied the story up and down, called his brother a liar and the favorite child, and refused to sign into the psychiatric hospital voluntarily. I felt I had no choice but to place him in an involuntary hold. It was a long and busy night, and every time I walked past his ED bay, he’d yell, “Is this the face of a crazy man? I know the law!” I tried to put myself in his position and that of his brother who had called the police. Eight is the emotional pain of involuntarily committing someone whose story isn’t black and white. Eight is the pain of exercising authority and beneficence over patient autonomy.
 

 

  • 10: I was consulted to evaluate a woman for suicidal ideation whose mother had coded and died in the ED an hour before. When the woman was told of her mother’s death, she crumpled to floor, screaming she wanted to die to join her mother. In the tumult, ED staff thought she was running out of the hospital to jump into traffic. She was held in the ED involuntarily until she could be evaluated for safety by psychiatry – me. When I entered her hospital room, she was quietly weeping, whispering: “I want my mom. I want my mom.” I wanted to cry, too. I sat with her in silence for a few minutes and offered my condolences. Yet, as the consultant, I had a job to do: I needed to complete a risk assessment. My voice caught as I explained that I was here to assess her for suicidal thoughts and plans. She looked at me like I was crazy. I felt crazy. I acknowledged the risk of suicide and her expressed desire to join her mother in death. I asked the questions quickly and gently. She shook her head to all my questions and told me she just wanted to go home. I met her daughters in the waiting room who were caught up in grief over the combination of their grandmother’s death and their mother’s reaction. They seemed certain that their mother had not wanted to die, and we agreed it was a situation of the wrong reaction in the wrong place. The daughters agreed to take her home and watch her all night. This is the only 10 I’ve experienced on the emotional pain scale. I felt shame and confusion as I struggled to reconcile my obligation as a psychiatrist, and my true desire to give that woman a hug and send her home without a battery of questions at perhaps her most vulnerable moment.

Dr. Posada is a third-year resident in the psychiatry and behavioral sciences department at George Washington University, Washington. She completed a bachelor’s degree at GWU. For 2 years after her undergraduate education, she worked at the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases studying HIV pathogenesis. Dr. Posada completed her medical degree at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Her interests include public psychiatry, health care policy, and health disparities, and she plans to pursue a fellowship in consult liaison psychiatry.

 

A transition is coming. My fourth and final year of residency starts soon – meaning that from July 1, 2018, I’ll never again be on call overnight as a psychiatry resident. July 1 marks the end of 2 years as a PGY2 and PGY3, during which I’ve worked 60 overnight shifts.

In our residency program, the on-call shift is a continuation of daytime duties, and the experience is a formative physician-in-training/quasi-hazing process of care provision for 24 hours straight. Previously, I’ve recounted experiences from my overnight on-call shifts and reflected on the intensity of working with emotionally distressed individuals in the emergency department. I never thought I’d say it, but I will miss working in the middle of the night, particularly in the ED. In the small hours of the morning, the strange aura of hospital existence, and desperation of sickness isn’t washed out by daylight and the inhibitions of business hours.

Thomas Northcut/Thinkstock
Being on call is a fact of medical training. No doubt it makes us stronger, more experienced physicians, able to respond to challenging clinical experiences in a less-than-optimal environment. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t painful.

As part of yearlong monitoring research, I’ve asked my fellow residents at George Washington University, in Washington, to participate in a quality improvement survey. It collects information on the number of patients evaluated overnight while on call and also asks residents to rate their on-call experiences on an “emotional pain scale” with space for a qualitative comment. The emotional pain scale is a simple visual analog scale for pain, with a smiley face representing 0 pain and the sad face with tears representing the 10 out of 10, worst pain imaginable. Initially, the emotional pain scale seemed a lighthearted and somewhat silly way for residents to vent about their on-call experience. A year of data collection later, I consider the emotional pain scale an important acknowledgment to my fellow residents that being on call is physically and emotionally taxing.

At the 2018 American Psychiatric Association meeting in New York, I presented findings from this survey data, examining the quantitative information showing that sheer volume of patients correlates with higher emotional pain scores. But while compiling and analyzing the data for my presentation, I also found myself reading and rereading the comments left by my colleagues about their hardest nights. As I read, I reflected on my own 60 nights on call, and my personal experiences between the highs and lows of emotional pain.

As an homage to the educational and emotional power of being on call, I’d like to share a few vignettes from my years of overnight calls from across the emotional pain scale. (Key demographic details have been omitted to protect patients’ privacy.):

  • 0: There is no such thing as 0 emotional pain when asked to stay overnight in the hospital.
 

 

  • 1: This is a full night of sleep on the uncomfortable bunk beds in the GWU call room. On occasion, I’ve had a night with one consult. Only once in 2 years did I have a night in which not a single consult was called from the ED and all the patients on the psychiatric unit slept as soundly as I did.
  • 4: There’s a man I’ve seen in the ED seven times over the last 2 years. That’s more than 10% of my nights on call, so we’re well acquainted – though he has trouble remembering me. He’s an alcoholic, though I know the official diagnosis is alcohol use disorder–severe. His addiction is, indeed, severe; I’ve never seen him sober. Every time, he tells me how his wife is cheating on him, and he’s been depressed since his eldest son was killed in a shooting 10 years ago. He sits under a bridge and drinks liquor until he either goes home or to an ED. I feel for him. Several times, other residents and I have transferred him to a local detoxification unit with discharge to a 30-day drug rehab program. It doesn’t stick. The last time I evaluated him, I sent him home to his wife with a cab voucher. My emotional pain is equal parts pity and frustration over my ineffectual impact on his life. He, and others like him, used to cause me more emotional pain. Eventually, the pain is dulled.
    Dr. Jacqueline Posada
  • 5: The mean pain scale score of a GWU resident on call is 5.13. Analysis of the survey data showed the emotional pain score is correlated with the specific resident on call, and my personal average is 5.04. From the way residents talk about being on call, I expected the mean pain scale to be higher. There is no vignette for the mean score; I think of it as all the unremarkable calls blurred together.
  • 8: Emotional pain rises with a fraught clinical scenario. One weeknight, I had to involuntarily commit a young lawyer who was psychotic yet adept at hiding it. The lawyer was brought into the ED by police after his brother in Chicago called them to his apartment. The patient had called the brother while standing on his 10th-floor balcony talking nonsensically about conspiracy theories and why he needed to end his life to save the world. In the ED, the patient denied every single part of the story. When I called the brother for collateral, his distress moved me as a both sibling and psychiatrist. The lawyer denied the story up and down, called his brother a liar and the favorite child, and refused to sign into the psychiatric hospital voluntarily. I felt I had no choice but to place him in an involuntary hold. It was a long and busy night, and every time I walked past his ED bay, he’d yell, “Is this the face of a crazy man? I know the law!” I tried to put myself in his position and that of his brother who had called the police. Eight is the emotional pain of involuntarily committing someone whose story isn’t black and white. Eight is the pain of exercising authority and beneficence over patient autonomy.
 

 

  • 10: I was consulted to evaluate a woman for suicidal ideation whose mother had coded and died in the ED an hour before. When the woman was told of her mother’s death, she crumpled to floor, screaming she wanted to die to join her mother. In the tumult, ED staff thought she was running out of the hospital to jump into traffic. She was held in the ED involuntarily until she could be evaluated for safety by psychiatry – me. When I entered her hospital room, she was quietly weeping, whispering: “I want my mom. I want my mom.” I wanted to cry, too. I sat with her in silence for a few minutes and offered my condolences. Yet, as the consultant, I had a job to do: I needed to complete a risk assessment. My voice caught as I explained that I was here to assess her for suicidal thoughts and plans. She looked at me like I was crazy. I felt crazy. I acknowledged the risk of suicide and her expressed desire to join her mother in death. I asked the questions quickly and gently. She shook her head to all my questions and told me she just wanted to go home. I met her daughters in the waiting room who were caught up in grief over the combination of their grandmother’s death and their mother’s reaction. They seemed certain that their mother had not wanted to die, and we agreed it was a situation of the wrong reaction in the wrong place. The daughters agreed to take her home and watch her all night. This is the only 10 I’ve experienced on the emotional pain scale. I felt shame and confusion as I struggled to reconcile my obligation as a psychiatrist, and my true desire to give that woman a hug and send her home without a battery of questions at perhaps her most vulnerable moment.

Dr. Posada is a third-year resident in the psychiatry and behavioral sciences department at George Washington University, Washington. She completed a bachelor’s degree at GWU. For 2 years after her undergraduate education, she worked at the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases studying HIV pathogenesis. Dr. Posada completed her medical degree at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Her interests include public psychiatry, health care policy, and health disparities, and she plans to pursue a fellowship in consult liaison psychiatry.

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