Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Freudian script
RalPh: "Hi, this is RalPh, the pharmacist over at local grocery. I'm calling about a script you wrote for Valerie Smith yesterday, for her Valium."
Dr. Grumpy: "Is there a problem? She gets it every month."
RalPh: "It's her name. You misspelled it."
Dr. Grumpy: "What did I write?"
RalPh: "Instead of Valerie Smith you wrote Valium Smith."
(pause)
Dr. Grumpy: "Holy crap. That's awesome."
RalPh: "Yeah, it took a while for the tech and I to stop laughing enough to call you."
Monday, January 30, 2012
Xenophobia FAIL!
Mr. Skin: "I don't know. A friend brought them back from Argentina."
Dr. Grumpy: "Did you take them?"
Mr. Skin: "No, because I don't trust Mexicans."
Time
Marie watched silently for a few minutes, then said: "That's not grandma. That lady has black hair. Grandma's is gray."
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Sunday reruns
So I called over there a minute ago to talk to her nurse:
Dr. Grumpy: "How'd she do this morning?"
Nurse Icu: "She's more awake, and we got her off the ventilator, but may have to put her back on again."
Dr. Grumpy: "Why? Is she still having trouble breathing?"
Nurse Icu: "No, she's just a bitch."
Saturday, January 28, 2012
My kids are jealous (hell, so am I!)
This pair of 17-year old guys, who live in Toronto, successfully launched a Lego figure into near-space (14 miles up) using a weather balloon, a lot of weekends, and costing about $400.
Just for fun.
They even sent 4 cameras and a GPS tracker with him, so they could film and recover him.
This is the movie they posted.
I'm thoroughly impressed guys. That's really cool.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Maybe I should start using Old Spice
Dr. Grumpy: "No."
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Drug company ads
So does anyone else out there think this ad campaign:
Would be a helluva lot better if it featured the Old Spice Guy?
"Smell like a man, man."
Just wondering.
Family ties
Mrs. Xanax: "It's very stressful. My sister and I aren't speaking to each other right now."
Dr. Grumpy: "I'm sorry to hear that. Is this the one who's having a baby? Last time you were here you were knitting a blanket for her?"
Mrs. Xanax: "Yeah, but that's where it all started. I was going to have the blanket done when she got to 36 weeks, but then she had all kinds of complications, and had a seizure, and they had to deliver the baby at 29 weeks, and the blanket wasn't done by then. Now she just spends all her time at the hospital visiting the baby, and I finally called and told her that I wasn't happy about how she ruined my plans to have the blanket ready in time, and that it's not all about her."
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Your tax dollars at work
In Oklahoma, however, an elected representative of the people (state Senator Ralph Shortey) has decided that eating human fetuses is a SERIOUS problem in America. If not now, it still could become one by, say, 2022.
So we need to act now to keep this from happening. Because, with all the other issues facing our society, people eating fetuses is apparently one of the bigger ones. At least to Mr. Shortey.
So he has, I SWEAR, introduced a bill to ban the practice of using human fetuses in food products.
Comically, he even admits that he's unaware of anyone actually doing this, but decided the law is needed because he researched the subject on the internet.
And we all know how accurate that is.
Thank you, Ed!
Counting
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
By jove, I think he's got it!
Dr. Grumpy: "Um, no?"
Mr. Gregory: "It's been 24 days since the month started."
Meetings and conferences and grand rounds OH MY!
In residency it continues, with most programs having at lease 1 daily conference. Residents who don't show up risk incurring the wrath of the program director.
In the REAL WORLD this stuff continues. It's worst if you stay in academics, but even in private practice there are CME courses, annual meetings, etc. to go to (okay, I haven't gone to any for over 12 years, but I'm atypical). My idol, Dr. Oscar London, pointed out that by the time they finish training most doctors are conditioned to doze off when they hear "May I have the first slide, please."
But I digress.
Anyway, the point here is that these meetings are BORING. Except for the occasional fistfight between doctors breaking out (I personally witnessed one at a tumor board between a medical oncologist and radiation oncologist) these things are dreary as hell.
But there are rare exceptions. The one that will likely live on as THE MOST INTERESTING MEDICAL PRESENTATION EVER was in 1983, at the American Urodynamics Association annual meeting.
The presenter was Sir Giles Brindley (knighted in 1986 for bioengineering research).
At this point, I'm going to send you over to a summary article for the remarkable story of that day.
Thank you, Science Marches On Department!
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