September/October 2020 Common Sense

Page 20

AAEM/RSA NEWS

When Do Things in Medicine Start to Become Common Knowledge? Shaughnelene D. Smith, BSc (Hons); Eddie K. Maybury, BSc

Several weeks ago, I finished my first year of medical school and began the arborous drive from Kansas City, Missouri, to California for a summer research position. When I was just six minutes away from my destination, my car of 21 years decided to break down. It is important to note that I am studying in the United States as an international student from Canada, and despite growing up as a neighbor from the north, much of the U.S. and its various systems are foreign to me.

What is considered common sense to someone from the United States is not what is considered to be general knowledge to someone international. Having to explain why I did not have a social security number and uncovering the process to obtain one proved to require more effort than some of my classes in medical school. I had to do the research not only for myself but also for those attempting to help me. In uncharted territory, stuck in an endless feedback loop of frustrating conversations, I couldn’t help but think of the ironic similarity to the U.S. health care system.

If I had an accident and end up in the emergency room, I wouldn’t even know what would As midnight approached and the smoke started be considered good practice. Do I have to pay billowing out of the front bonnet, I found myself before you treat me? Yes, I have insurance, pulling off to the side of the road in a city unfabut what does that mean? Am I supposed to miliar to myself. I quickly took all the essential learn about this in medical school, or does it paperwork from my vehicle – F1-student visa, come naturally over the years as you spend time in a hospital? When My car experience taught me that despite English being do these essential details become my first language, being well educated, and growing up in common sense as I continue on the a country that is arguably culturally similar to the United trajectory from student to doctor?

States, I still had an element of vulnerability.”

passport, insurance papers – and found a rock a safe distance away, where I proceeded to call my parents and quickly realized how clueless I was in navigating what to do next. The following day, in the early hours of the morning, a tow truck transported my car to the nearest dealership, where the diagnosis was made that I had injured the radiator driving through an extreme heatwave. The vehicle’s internal damage wasn’t worth the cost of repairs, and so began the days of paperwork and arduous tasks to find a new car. Much of this headache included learning about the processes trying to purchase a vehicle as an international student, surrender my Canadian license plate, change insurance companies, and finding a way to scrap an unwanted foreign car with an odometer tainted in kilometers rather than miles.

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COMMON SENSE SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2020

As I advance in my medical training, I have good faith that I will slowly learn these various processes; however, I often question how disorientating this might seem to a patient unfamiliar with a country’s medical system. How often do they experience distress and uncertainty due to a lack of knowledge that others have subconsciously acquired by growing up within the U.S.? It was reported in 2018 that more than 44.7 million immigrants lived in the United States.1 Although I am not an immigrant per se, I would speculate that this would indicate that there is a sizable population just as lost and confused as myself when it comes to navigating these systems both within and outside of health care. My car experience taught me that despite English being my first language, being well educated, and growing up in a country that is arguably culturally similar to

the United States, I still had an element of vulnerability. Most of the newly-discovered tasks I encountered seemed like a different language and left me feeling like I didn’t have full control of my situation. Taking into consideration a patient’s perspective, I can only begin to imagine how troubling this must be, especially when we start to consider differences in language, cultural, and past experience regarding medical care. We are taught as medical students not to use medical jargon when communicating with standardized patients. This rule is implemented so that we don’t overwhelm the patient with words that they may not understand; however, I never considered that even if everything was explained in lay terminology, the process may still not be intuitive. As physicians, we need to consider this as a part of our efforts better to

WHAT IS CONSIDERED COMMON SENSE TO SOMEONE FROM THE UNITED STATES IS NOT WHAT IS CONSIDERED TO BE GENERAL KNOWLEDGE TO SOMEONE INTERNATIONAL.” improve immigrant status as a social determinant of health. It has long been established that immigrants have higher morbidity and mortality rates than their non-immigrant counterparts.

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Articles inside

Job Bank

2min
pages 58-59

Medical Student Council President’s Message: The Open Door

3min
pages 56-57

Resident Journal Review: Do Adjunctive Therapies Beyond Infection Control and Appropriate Fluid Resuscitation Change Outcomes in Sepsis and Septic Shock?

17min
pages 52-55

AAEM/RSA Editor: “Zooming” into a New Era of Clinical Education

6min
pages 50-51

AAEM/RSA President’s Message: What’s Going on with the Emergency Medicine Job Market?

5min
pages 48-49

Young Physicians: Resiliency in Medicine

6min
pages 46-47

Ethics: A Novel Committee on a Very Important Directive

5min
page 34

Young Physicians: 2020 Graduates: You Don’t Have to Go it Alone After Residency

3min
pages 44-45

Emergency Ultrasound: Making Point of Care Ultrasound Accessible for All

5min
pages 41-43

Women in EM: Mothering in the Time of COVID

8min
pages 39-40

Critical Care Medicine: To Those Who Initiate Critical Care

7min
pages 37-38

Wellness: Gratitude and Appreciation Amidst Chaos and Uncertainty: Awaken Humanity at Work

6min
pages 35-36

Social EM & Population Health: Social EM: What it is and Why it Matters

6min
pages 27-28

ABEM News

4min
page 26

EM Workforce: Maybe July 1st Isn’t so Dangerous After All

7min
pages 31-33

EM Workforce: Will There Be a Doctor in the House?

7min
pages 29-30

Human Trafficking: A Review for Health Care Providers

6min
pages 24-25

Telehealth and Emergency Medicine: Our Virtual Practice

5min
pages 22-23

New Cancer Diagnoses during COVID

3min
pages 18-19

Updates and Announcements

5min
pages 12-13

LEAD-EM Donations

5min
pages 8-9

AAEM Signs on to Joint Letter to CMS to Sunset Waivers When PHE Concludes

5min
pages 14-15

When Do Things in Medicine Start to Become Common Knowledge?

4min
pages 20-21

A Letter to All People Staying Neutral about Black Lives Matter

4min
pages 16-17

From the Editor’s Desk: People are People

10min
pages 5-6

Regular Features

7min
pages 3-4
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