• notsoshaihulud@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Headlines like this are annoying AF. You wouldn’t want your doctor keeping their phone on DND 24/7.

    Edit: I didn’t expect people to need examples, but here you go, something that happened to me few months ago:

    23:21 - my IP phone rings, I’m literally about to go to sleep but I set this specific type of call to come through. I recognize the number and I know it’s an emergency so I pick it up. A patient’s family calling about them being in their local ER and the ER physician is about to pull the plug on my patient. I spend the next hour yelling at the ER physician to do his fucking job, frantically arranging a transfer. Next day afternoon, I’m having a full conversation with my patient in our hospital. If I didn’t fight for this person, and let this go through the regular channels, they would have died.

    My comment isn’t primarily about work culture or work/life balance. There are some calls that you take because it’s the right thing. Advice from people who claim they can turn off all notifications just tells me two things, 1) they don’t know how notification scheduling works 2) they aren’t the kind of people that others ever rely on in an emergencies.

      • notsoshaihulud@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        if they are doing outpatient work, they don’t. even worse, the paging systems migrated to cell phones.

        sauce: am doctor

        • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          You really should use a separate phone though. Even if it’s just a virtual phone. Everyone deserves to have free time.