• Home
  • About
    • About This Blog
    • Background
  • Disclaimer
  • Oh Hey Blogs

Vexing Microbes

Musings of an Infectious Disease Specialist

  • View GaggreyMD’s profile on Twitter
  • View GaggreyMD’s profile on LinkedIn
  • View gkaggrey’s profile on Google+
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Medical Training
  • Medicine
  • Musings

Tips for Effective Infectious Disease Consultations

18 April, 2012 by GAggreyMD Leave a Comment

Some tips for effective infectious disease consultations

DO be courteous and appreciative no matter how ridiculous you think the consultation is. Consults are your lifeline.

DO identify the question(s) asked of you.

DO answer the question(s) asked of you.

DO try to change a curbside into a formal consultation. You’ll be amazed at what was left out or misconstrued when you actually talk to the patient and review the chart yourself. 

DO communicate verbally with the primary service or other pertinent consultants on the case. You will always uncover hidden questions or concerns.

DO gather data from all sources. No, no-one else is calling Hospital B and C’s microbiology department for
cultures done there in X time-frame.

DO ask the patient what their explanatory model for their illness is. I admit this is a strange one. The patient might shoot back “you are the physician aren’t you?”, and might automatically think you clueless so be selective in whom you pose this question to. But more often than not, patients tend to reveal a historical point they’ve told no-one else that might be helpful in your evaluation.

DON’T be shy in being intrusive in the patient’s life.  Assuming that old people do not have sexual intercourse will not help you diagnose an STD in an octogenarian.

DON’T assume the reason for consultation is all there is to the case. “Cellulitis – not responding to antibiotics”, may not be cellulitis at all but rather sarcoidosis in which simply broadening the antibiotic coverage or switching antibiotics is not going to help. I sometimes evaluate a patient from the standpoint that the diagnosis to date is wrong. Pompous I know, but I figure “if they knew what they were doing, they wouldn’t be asking my opinion”. Which is why I plough through with rude patients who don’t want to talk to “yet another doctor because everything is in the chart”. No, patients, everything is not in the chart!

DON’T be verbose in your consultation. Honestly. Be comprehensive but concise.

DO be reasonable and cost/resource-conscious in workup. Just because you’ve generated a broad differential does not mean that you now order every single test and study known to man and start multiple antimicrobial agents to cover everything. The primary service could have done that. Knowing when to pursue certain tests and what antibiotics to start and when to start is part of the nuances of our art.

DO have a contingency plan verbalized or charted. After all, you are human and your first diagnosis or treatment plan may be wrong or inadequate. Like Gregory House, MD you DO want to keep re-evaluating your list of differential diagnoses especially if the patient is not responding the way you expect them to.

DON’T be afraid to just observe the patient…even off antibiotics. This in itself is a plan of
action. It’s not “doing nothing”. This is another nuance in the art of being an infectious disease specialist.

Internists, particularly infectious disease specialists, are often called “fleas” (as in “the last one to jump off a dying dog”)…I suppose this is derogatory but don’t let that deter you, DO keep patients on your radar (at the very least) as a simple issue early in the hospitalization may turn out to be a more complex one (related or not) later down the line… Besides, the primary service today who is covering the patient that was picked up as a transfer from a different floor or different service is ignoring the upward trending leukocytosis because “ID is on the case” or “per ID” as eloquently copied/pasted day after day after day…

(Visited 311 times, 1 visits today)

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window) Pocket

Like this:

Like Loading...

Filed Under: Infectious Diseases Tagged With: ID Fellowship, Medical Residency

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Follow Vexing Microbes on WordPress.com
My Tweets

Popular Posts

  • How I Re-certified for the ID Boards
  • Life as an Infectious Disease Consultant
  • Coding Sepsis
  • Infectious Disease – The Coolest Medical Specialty
  • Thoughts on Private Practice Infectious Disease

Archives

Keywords

Abx Resistance Abx Stewardship Angry Patients Antimicrobials Boards Bureaucracy Burnout Checklist Medicine Clinical Practice Conference Consults Death Diagnostics Doctor-Patient Relationship Doctoring Ebola Financial Medicine Ghana Hand Hygiene Healthcare Health Economics HIV ID Fellowship Influenza Insurance In The News Job Search Korle-Bu Medical Education Medical Residency Microbes Personal Responsibility Physician Income Prevention Public Health Save Abx Sepsis Social Commentary Social Media STI Student Loans Trust Viruses Why ID Women Doctors

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 6 other subscribers.

Copyright © 2025 · Lifestyle Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

%d