Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#75 – Thrive in Training: communicating with preceptors

In this episode, the founders of From the Head of the Bed… Jon Lowrance, Kristin (Andrejco) Lowrance, Brad Morgan & Cassidy Padgett, talk about how to communicate with preceptors as anesthesia trainees.

This conversation was recorded as one of the original podcasts released at the launch of From the Head of the Bed, the podcast the proceeded Anesthesia Guidebook, back on March 10, 2015. Over 7 years later, it’s getting a re-release here as part of the Thrive in Training series and the tips shared are just as relevant as ever.

All four of these folks were third-year SRNAs at the time of this recording and offer tips for anesthesia trainees hitting the clinical environment for how to communicate with preceptors. How well you get along with the folks you work with in the OR will either make or break your day – as an anesthesia trainee and as a licensed anesthesia provider. It takes a hefty dose of emotional intelligence to navigate the relationships found in the OR. This is one of the things that many anesthesia trainees find surprising: just how hard they have to work to understand the people they work with, what relationships are already at play in the OR between OR RNs, surgeons, CSTs & anesthesia providers and how to create positive working relationships with preceptors.

It’s rare that anesthesia training programs – for CRNA or physician anesthesiologists – provide education on how to become a clinical anesthesia educator or preceptor. Those skills are usually left up to anesthesia providers to figure out on the job. Given that, many anesthesia providers don’t approach their roles as preceptors and clinical educators with deliberate and highly functional skills and techniques. They just do their job as anesthesia providers and expect anesthesia trainees to figure the job out as they work together through the day. Given this context, it’s critical for anesthesia trainees to understand how to communicate with preceptors in order to create positive working relationships.

That’s not to say that the onus is just on anesthesia trainees for creating their own positive educational experiences. Certainly, clinical faculty and anesthesia training programs should bear the primary responsibility for creating effective educational environments for their trainees. But given that the quality of educational settings for anesthesia trainees can vary greatly, along with the clinical teaching skills of faculty, it can only help if you as an anesthesia trainee show up with some knowledge of how to communicate with your preceptors. So that’s what we talk about in this podcast.

We hit on the following topics:

  • Importance of communication skills in the perioperative environment
  • How to prepare for clinicals
  • Tips for making pre-clinical phone calls to preceptors
  • The use of cell phones/electronic devices in the OR
  • Common questions preceptors ask students
  • How your communication skills should evolve during training
  • Importance of being teachable, flexible, humble and thankful

In the podcast, we talk about the “smooth & in” video. Unfortunately, I can’t find it and the prior link has been removed. It was a classic. If someone can find it, let me know.

Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#74 – Thrive in Training: how to crush clinical

This episode offers a run down on how to prepare for the clinical phase of anesthesia training. We touch on practical tips like which apps are helpful, what gear to utilize & how to acclimate to the clinical environment as well as meta issues like developing emotional intelligence and the right kind of attitude to create success in your journey.

I also highlight a bunch of other shows on Anesthesia Guidebook that are not part of this series that you may find helpful.

Outside of the Thrive in Training series, we’ve got lots of content on pharmacology and much more to come.  But to prepare for clinical, don’t miss the shows on the top drawer run down (episodes 17, 18 & 19), which for years were the number 1 requested content and remain some of the most listened to episodes.  Other shows on pharmacology include run downs on dexmedetomidine, succinylcholine, buprenorphine, the pharmacokinetics & pharmacodynamics of volatile anesthetics, local anesthetics and ondansetron for preventing spinal induced hypotension.  We’ve got an episode on a multi-modal, opioid sparing approach to total knee replacement surgery, one that overviews regional anesthesia, one on opioid free anesthesia and one on the anesthesia implications for patients who use cannabis.  

Other content that you’ll find helpful are 2 shows for anesthesia trainees who are going through the process with your families:  episode 15 is specifically about your significant others and anesthesia school with Jenny & Robert Montague.  Rob is now one of my CRNA colleagues here in Portland, Maine and his wife, Jenny, is a Registered Dietician.  They have 2 young kids and talk about the experience of doing anesthesia school as a family.  The other episode is number 50 – parenting during anesthesia training with Lein & Nate Woodin.  Lein was actually in Robert’s class at the University of New England and her husband, Nate, is a licensed child therapist.  They’re an amazing couple, also with 2 young kids, and we focus in specifically on the changing dynamics of parenting during anesthesia training.  Nate brings a wealth of experience to the conversation as a child therapist and husband of an SRNA.  

A couple other episodes you’ll want to go back to check out that would fit perfectly in the Thrive in Training series:  

Episode 10 is 10-quick tips on mastering airway management, episode 24 is with Jason Bolt and we talk about avoiding landmines as an anesthesia trainee in how you represent yourself on social media.  Episodes 31-37 all deal with learning anesthesia & the path to expertise; so we hit on deliberate practice, understanding cognitive state of flow in balancing challenge with skill and the power of the invisible can-of-calm.  We also hit on asynchronous learning, emotional intelligence of SRNAs and the transition, this year, of entry-to-practice training for CRNAs becoming a doctorate degree, when, for the last 30 years or so, it’s been a master’s degree.  

Then there’s a 10-episode run on provider wellness from episodes 51 through 60 that touch on everything from how to pay your debt off, to dealing with the pandemic to how to weather the storms and setbacks you’ll have in anesthesia training.  The top show in that run for anesthesia trainees, if you want to go back and just pick out one, is episode 54: hardship in anesthesia school.  This continues to be one of the most-listened to episodes from all of Anesthesia Guidebook and zeroes in on the best advice and stories I have for you if you find yourself up against a wall or being beat down by god-knows what on your path to becoming an anesthesia provider.  

Here’s the NRS Video Dream where Ben Marr imagines what life would be like if he was good at paddling. It’s amazing! (This is what it’s like to be a novice in the OR, watching the expert providers all around you… you just WANNA BE GOOD!)

Categories
Anesthesia Education Preparing for Grad School/Residency Wellness

#68 – Thrive in Training: how to prepare for anesthesia school

The Thrive in Training series is designed to help physician and nurse anesthesia residents succeed in anesthesia training.

The key to thriving in training is setting your trajectory in life based on your deep interest, learning to embrace deliberate practice in your craft, remembering your why and locking on to the hope that comes with knowing your goal is worth the work you will put in.

Topics covered include:

  • developing a growth mindset
  • dialing in didactics
  • crushing clinicals
  • developing time management
  • avoiding landmines and overcoming set backs
  • dealing with hardship in anesthesia training
  • financial management
  • preparing for and acing exams and boards
  • tips for the job hunt
  • transitioning to practice and through the first six months after training

In this episode, the second in the series, I talk with Mason McDowell, DNAP, CRNA and Kara Michalov, MSN, CRNA about the following:

– advice for how to prepare for nurse anesthesia school
– advice for students with families, significant others & pets
– what to study (or not) ahead of time
– how to prepare for the Big Interview to get into school

I released this episode originally on February 21, 2015 on the podcast From the Head of the Bed. Today, exactly 7 years later, it’s coming back to Anesthesia Guidebook as part of the Thrive in Training series with a fresh introduction. I also summarize tips for preparing for anesthesia school at the end of the show. What Mason & Kara share remains relevant and they offer keen insights from their personal experience. You’ll definitely enjoy this conversation!

At the time of this interview, Mason McDowell, DNAP, CRNA was the Associate Professor and former Assistant Director of the Nurse Anesthesia Program at Western Carolina University.   His Doctorate of Nurse Anesthesia Practice (DNAP) from Texas Wesleyan University included research focused on perioperative patient management and cardiac risk assessment.  He is the co-author of the Hepatobiliary and Gastrointestinal Disturbances and Anesthesia chapter in Nagelhout’s Nurse Anesthesia 5th Edition.  A few weeks after this interview in 2015, Mason moved with his wife and two daughters to Bere, Chad to provide anesthesia. You can hear more about his story in episode 61 & 62 of Anesthesia Guidebook. You can also read about his experiences in Chad at http://www.whyweshouldgo.blogspot.com.

At the time of this interview, Kara Michalov, MSN, CRNA was a CRNA in Asheville, North Carolina. Kara and Mason are co-authors of Intravenous Acetaminophen and Intravenous Ketorolac for Management of Pediatric Surgical Pain: A Literature Review, which was published in the February 2014 edition of the AANA Journal (Vol. 82, No.1).

Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Personal Finances Preparing for Grad School/Residency Wellness

#67 – How to Thrive in Training

This is the first episode in a series that will focus on helping anesthesia residents thrive in training. This is designed for physician and nurse anesthesia trainees and will unpack crucial beta for helping you dial your game in during anesthesia training.

In this first episode I discuss finding your why behind going to anesthesia school. Your why is what will propel you through the tough times in training and help you find the motivation to excel.

Angela Duckworth is a psychologist and researcher who, in her bestselling book titled Grit – the power of passion and perseverance, says that grit is what separates those who succeed from those who fail when facing extreme challenge.

Your why will help you develop the level of grit that you need to get through the challenges of anesthesia training.  

Grit is what you have when your passion fuels a perseverance that propels you through obstacles to achieve your goals.

Duckworth says there’s four components of developing grit: interested, practice, purpose and hope.

Do you have an authentic interest in the work anesthesia providers do? Are you stoked about the field of anesthesia and have an accurate mental representation of what it’s actually about?

You will need to develop deliberate practice in order to master the craft of anesthesia and become competent in the core skills/knowledge base. If you’re unwilling to do this, anesthesia training will quickly seem overwhelming and you probably won’t make it. But deliberate practice is the key to unlocking true skill development and expertise and will make the road ahead achievable.

You must know your purpose – or your why – behind going to anesthesia school. This episode is all about finding that. It will be the reason you come back to when the road gets tough and you have to find the motivation to push through the challenges, set backs and hurdles that will inevitably come your way.

And lastly, hope is what you will have in your back pocket when you believe that the journey is worth all the hard work you put in. Hope comes when you believe that the juice is worth the squeeze, that the payoff is worth the effort.

Interest. Practice. Purpose. Hope. When you understand and foster each of these in your journey, you will develop a grittiness that will see you through the steepest of climbs and most difficult days.

Stay tuned for the upcoming series where you’ll hear from CRNAs, professors and SRNAs alike on the following topics:

  • developing a growth mindset
  • dialing in didactics
  • crushing clinicals
  • developing time management
  • avoiding landmines and overcoming set backs
  • dealing with hardship in anesthesia training
  • financial management
  • preparing for and acing exams and boards
  • tips for the job hunt
  • transitioning to practice and through the first six months after training

This series is an active work in progress so if there’s something you want to hear about, be sure to reach out and let me know!