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Interview with an ER Doc: Dr. Joe Dearie

  • June 6, 2019
  • 1 minute read
A simple intervention conducted by hospital emergency department staff can reduce the risk of future suicide attempts, a new study shows.
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1. Finish the sentence: People have a much better chance of not ending up in the ER if . . .

Dr. Dearie:  …they take a proactive role in managing their health with a priority on preventive health evaluations and good dietary/lifestyle choices.  

2. What’s the most common question you get asked when somebody finds out what you do?

Dr. Dearie: Inevitably “That must be an interesting job …. What’s the strangest thing you have ever seen in the ER?”

3. What one basic medical skill should everybody learn?

Dr. Dearie: CPR and use of AED (Automated External Defibrillator)

4. What’s a common misconception people have about what you do? 

Dr. Dearie: Due to the version of Emergency Medicine depicted in the innumerable TV shows/movies over the last 20 years, many people feels like the ER is place of non-stop excitement, critical life and death cases and drama.  The reality is that there is a significant of “routine” in the ER, interspersed with occasional critical cases.

5. Do people expect everyday to be an episode of Grey’s Anatomy or ER?

Dr. Dearie: Exactly.  There was a time when those shows were at their peak of popularity that there was a nearly palpable let down when the physician walked into the room as the patient was apparently expecting Dr Meredith Grey or Dr Doug Ross!

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