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What are all you cuntilicious freakfaces doing tonight?

string_bean00 said:
depends on the job, anywhere from 12-22$/ hour, i am a lowly grunt tho so everyone else makes more than I at the moment
learn framing if you want to know a good trade.
trim work too, always a need for good carpenters.
roofers meh not so much
 
Tirpitz said:
learn framing if you want to know a good trade.
trim work too, always a need for good carpenters.
roofers meh not so much

i dont want to do this kind of work for too long, it's just fast easy cash right now

half the dudes I work with in their 40s are so torn up, dont want to be like them
 
I am at work right now. Until 9 am tomorrow morning.

So far I have had (approximately in some cases)

15 query myocardial infarctions

1 query salicylate/paracetamol overdose

3 newborn babies (just checking them out)

2 sick babies

1 cerebral spinal fluid for meningitis

and about 50 more people who really didn't need to come to AE/ER

:)

9 more hours to go................
 
tatyana - are you doing your residency?

tatyana_zadorozny said:
I am at work right now. Until 9 am tomorrow morning.

So far I have had (approximately in some cases)

15 query myocardial infarctions

1 query salicylate/paracetamol overdose

3 newborn babies (just checking them out)

2 sick babies

1 cerebral spinal fluid for meningitis

and about 50 more people who really didn't need to come to AE/ER

:)

9 more hours to go................
 
mightymouse69 said:
tatyana - are you doing your residency?


No I am a scientist who works in hospital. Biochem.

It has been 6 years of uni and two years of training to be state registered in the UK.

I did think about medicine, I could have done an accelerated degree with my qualifications, but dealing with all those sick people, YUCK.

They do train us in such a way that at 4 am in the morning, you can still make sense of things.

I do get to tell doctors off (sometimes), which is a bit of a kick.

They get so little training in pathology, they do rely on us quite a bit to actually tell them what tests they need and what they mean.

I am considering doing some more training to become a consultant biochemist, I would have to sit the same exams that consultants do, and it takes another 5- 7 years for an MRC Path (medical royal college of pathology exam).

Just had a 46 year old with a 'severe heading'

Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww, you would think he would know better at his age.

I think the best one I have had this year is 'patient complain of (C/O) abdo pains - also has stab wound to upper left side of chest'


:)
 
Thanks; I spent a number of years in hospitals - also in clinical research in biotech; now I just write! I went back for my doctorate after 9 years of working - I knew I could go further than I was doing day-to-day, do you want to continue?

tatyana_zadorozny said:
No I am a scientist who works in hospital. Biochem.

It has been 6 years of uni and two years of training to be state registered in the UK.

I did think about medicine, I could have done an accelerated degree with my qualifications, but dealing with all those sick people, YUCK.

They do train us in such a way that at 4 am in the morning, you can still make sense of things.

I do get to tell doctors off (sometimes), which is a bit of a kick.

They get so little training in pathology, they do rely on us quite a bit to actually tell them what tests they need and what they mean.

I am considering doing some more training to become a consultant biochemist, I would have to sit the same exams that consultants do, and it takes another 5- 7 years for an MRC Path (medical royal college of pathology exam).

Just had a 46 year old with a 'severe heading'

Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww, you would think he would know better at his age.

I think the best one I have had this year is 'patient complain of (C/O) abdo pains - also has stab wound to upper left side of chest'


:)
 
mightymouse69 said:
Thanks; I spent a number of years in hospitals - also in clinical research in biotech; now I just write! I went back for my doctorate after 9 years of working - I knew I could go further than I was doing day-to-day, do you want to continue?


Cool!

I am debating what I want to do. I would like a change after working in labs the entire time I have been doing my degrees (the NHS has kindly paid for my last two, so I did them part time while working).

I would have to take about 4 more psych classes and I will have a degree that I could use with the British Psychological Society, and get into a master's program, I have been thinking about sports psychology combined with a few more nutrition classes.......

Also thinking about getting the 'papers' to be a PT, I was thinking about doing Charles Poliquin's courses.

What was your thesis on?

And what is BC?
 
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