30 Basic Skills Every Doctor Should Possess

As many ScienceBlogs readers know by now, last month Popular Mechanics published a list on their website of “25 Skills Every Man Should Know,” which included such esoteric talents as “frame a wall” and “extend your wireless network.” How these two made the list over such accomplishments as “find tickets to a Hannah Montana concert,” or “pass gas anonymously on an airplane flight” is beyond me, but then again I’m a doctor, not a popular mechanic.

Just for fun I’d like to share my version of this meme, so without further ado here is a list of 25 skills every doctor worth his or her salt should be able to do. The list is in no particular order and is my opinion only. Any omissions or refutations may be listed in the peanut gallery section of this post.

Skills all doctors should possess:

1. Take a blood pressure.

2. Insert IV Cannula

3- Treat diabetic coma

4- Do PV examination and diagnose labour

5. Identify a pneumothorax on a chest radiograph.

6. Diagnose iron deficiency anemia.

7. Treat simple infections.

8. Help a patient stop smoking cigarettes.

9. Diagnose thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, which has a mortality rate of 90% if not treated and 10-20% if treated.

10. Distinguish between the various tachyarrhythmias.

11. Find enlarged lymph nodes or splenomegaly on examination.

12. Successfully treat hypertension, or find a doctor who can.

13. Explain a disease or procedure to patients in plain, understandable terms.

14. Use the internet to find medical information and references.

15. Deliver bad news compassionately, yet honestly.

16. Know when to speak, and when to listen.

17. Practice what they preach, especially when it comes to a healthy diet.

18. Recognize when a patient needs to be transferred to the ICU.

19. Know when to call in a consultant and when to do the work themselves.

20. Refer a patient to the right specialist at the right time, or at least within a reasonable time period.

21. Be unafraid to say “I don’t know.”

22. Understand the precious value of time, both theirs and their patients’.

23. View their medical colleagues as a source of support, information and camaraderie.

24. Treat nurses and other staff in a courteous and professional manner.

25. Learn the gentle art of patience, patience and more patience.

26. Keep up with important advances in health care and research.

27. Never let anger, the killer of careers, interfere with the mission at hand.

28. Be able to always, always, have a plan of action to help a patient.

29. Appreciate the unique gifts each physician carries within, and never let a tough day become an excuse to withhold them from those who need them the most.

30. Know that money is not everything

by Craig Hildreth

Pubblicato da drsilenzi

Medico specialista in Igiene e Medicina Preventiva, PhD in Sanità Pubblica presso l’Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore – Roma. Attualmente opera presso la Direzione Strategica dell'Agenzia di Tutela della Salute di Brescia ed è membro del Comitato Direttivo del Centro di Ricerca e Studi sulla Leadership in Medicina dell'Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore. Dal 2014 riveste la carica di Vice Presidente Vicario della Società Italiana di leadership e Management in Medicina – SIMM (www.medici-manager.it).

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