Although most people view the "difficult" stuff in medicine as making  that astute diagnosis, responding to emergencies, and finessing  treatment plans, the most dangerous part of next year for me will be  navigating a process called sign out. In sign out, one physician  transfers the information and responsibility for care of a patient to  another physician. This occurs a lot. At the end of each day, teams sign  out their patients to the on-call doctors. At some point in the  evening, a night resident (called a "float") comes in and receives  sign-out from the on-call team. While most patients have no issues at  night, if something does happen, the doctor who responds won't be the  doctor who knows them best. This is a necessary part of the system;  otherwise, all residents would be at the hospital all the time.  Furthermore, sign outs are becoming more prevalent because of work-hour  restrictions. Residents aren't allowed to be at the hospital for more  than 30 hours at a time (or 80 hours in a week) so at the end of a  30-hour shift, someone else must take responsibility for the care of the  patients. (Cross-cover, which is in the title of the post is a similar  sort of situation).
Interestingly, I got a talk about sign-out from  UCSF at the end of our last block "Coda" and a talk from Stanford  during our orientation; this is how important that process is. It's  compounded by so many more difficulties; outgoing residents are  exhausted and want to go home, on-call residents are swamped with work;  patients are extraordinarily complicated. Most medical students have  seen the "there's nothing to do on my patients" sign-out and that's  simply not adequate, though it's tempting. Communication is central to so many preventable errors. Thus, it was great  to get two recent lectures on this process (and good to know that the  key points were the same at both places) and hopefully I will keep this  in mind as I start later this week.
 
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