
Doctor Diaries Erinnerungs-Service per E-Mail
Die junge Ärztin Margarete schlägt sich mit Frust, zwei attraktiven Männern und ihren Patienten herum. Dabei ist es schwierig für sie, sich zwischen dem selbstbewussten Dr. Marc Meier und dem einfühlsamen Gynäkologen Dr. Mehdi Kaan zu entscheiden. Doctor's Diary ist eine deutsch-österreichische Arztserie, die von 20vom Sender RTL in Koproduktion mit dem ORF produziert wurde. Mittelpunkt der. Die Serie Doctor's Diary – Männer sind die beste Medizin ist die etwas andere Arztserie. Eine Woche vor ihrer geplanten Hochzeit erwischt die junge Ärztin Dr. Created by Bora Dagtekin, Steffi Ackermann. With Diana Amft, Peter Prager, Ursela Monn, Florian David Fitz. A female doctor is abandoned at the altar resulting. 'Doctor's Diary' war eine Krankenhaus-Serie bei RTL, in der sich alles um die junge Ärztin Gretchen Haase dreht. Diana Amft, Florian David Fitz und Kai. Dr. Gretchen Haase - die zarteste Versuchung seit es Ärztinnen gibt! Doch wer ist ihr Seelendoktor - Marc, Medhi oder doch Alexis? Erleben sie noch einmal von. Doctor's Diary - Männer sind die beste Medizin Erst verhindert ein Unfall das geplante Date von Dr. Meier und Gretchen, dann legt Schwester Gabi den.
I'm conscious of the fact that I don't abuse myself or my body. Well, I mean, being an intern you abuse yourself because you're If you have to go, just let it go.
We'll clean you up. If you have to go All I can say is that I hope life after internship is nothing like life during internship, because this is not why I became a doctor, and I really am not very happy.
And it's no one thing in particular, it's just being underpaid labor, spending very little time taking real care of patients, doing everything and anything that's necessary because I'm, you know, the bottom line.
Our cameras tracked them from the first days of medical school to the sleepless nights of internship, A unique behind the scenes look at the making of a doctor on Doctors' Diaries.
Elliott Bennett-Guerrero, anesthesiologist and clinical trialist. I was trained as a pediatrician at Harvard Medical School. Doesn't that sound good?
Welcome to the Deaconess. This is everybody congregating before we all go off to our respective jobs. Dave," and that's what I feel like, you know: Dr.
Dave, nothing more, really. It's the first time where I feel I have responsibility, and if I don't do something well, I could cause my patient harm, and that would be the worst thing one could do.
I am sure there are certain things we do every day that have negative side effects, and now I am going to be one of the ones doing those things, and I'll cause negative side effects to people, but that's part of what you have to do to treat somebody.
But that's a hard thing to live with. You're constantly in a panic, you're afraid you're going to do something wrong. She's over I probably want to hydrate her, but I'm just wondering, do you think we could turn down her W-tracks a little bit?
People say, "This is your doctor," and you are the patient's doctor. You shouldn't be, but you are. And this person is going to tell you all the things that should lead you to understand their disease, but you really don't have a prayer of making heads or tails of it.
These are the worst blood gases I have ever seen. I never saw a living person with gases that bad. You will give them a large number of man-hours to take care of their patients at low cost, and in return they will teach you how to be a doctor.
There's, like, all these patients, and they all have multiple problems, and they're going for tests, and results are coming back from tests, and you're making treatment decisions based on tests and, sort of, keeping it all straight: who got what, when and how.
What they need next just can be kind of mind-boggling. That's a lot of information to keep track of. She had deep S.
And that's what I am really working on tonight, trying to figure out what's going to be a good system for me that will keep me from going back to the chart three times to see if I checked X and did Y and so forth.
It is the rotation, which is, at this hospital, one of the most difficult ones in terms of the workload.
I've gotten to a point where it's not that I don't care about patients, but that the fact that I care about.
I forget simple basic things. People will remind me, "You didn't do this thing on this patient. He doesn't really read; he doesn't really get to go out too much.
He's really He's actually a pretty hyper person, generally, by nature. And then to see him so worn out, just sort of a shell, I mean, what I get is lousy.
The best part of him goes away early in the morning, for the whole day, and then when he comes home, what do I have? He's this tired grouchy thing.
So far I have admitted one patient with fever, probable sepsis, and done a lumbar puncture; subsequently disimpacted that patient, which is great fun.
What that means is to take all the stool out of that person's rectum by hand. I have visited all my own patients in the hospital, wrote notes on several of them, checked their labs, drawn some blood tests on patients that needed them to be done, and I've just now wheeled up my second admission for the night and will be going shortly to examine her.
I am taking a short food break because I'm getting a little hypoglycemic here. I had the operation. Now the front of my leg, from here down, is numb, and every time I take a shower, my whole leg gets numb.
It may interest you to know that different people mean different things by that phrase. I came into medical training, I think, one of the more sensitive people in the field.
I'm going into psychiatry. My whole emphasis is on the emotional and the understanding the mental aspects of medicine. And yet, for all of that interest on my part, I cannot help but become this person that I don't particularly like, even.
Have you been taking Right now, I'm six months into my internship, and I'd say I'm gradually just getting more and more tired.
I think, in part, because, you know, I never really get a free weekend the whole year. MELISSA Elliot's wife : Being married your first year is difficult enough, in and of itself, without your husband working 80 or 90 hours a week and then come home and be exhausted.
It's very sad; it's very hard. I'm very lonely. If you are a very, very needy person, and you always need a lot of attention and support from your spouse, you're probably not going to be happy being married to a doctor.
One of the best features of this residency training program is that we can do home visits. Nei has two major problems that I'm worried about.
One is difficulty breathing from his heart and his lungs, and the other major problem is his depression. Nobody cares for me.
And trying to kind of find a way into him, make a relationship with him, to help him And so I called his son, when his son got home, and I told him to bring him in to the emergency room.
Ni gen jiang ta ma? Shi ma? Gen wenzhen hao ma? Have you talked with him? How was it? Was it okay with Wenzhen? We're going to work on that.
You have a lot of use. Nei looked to death as a solace, as a time when he could meet his maker and his wife. However, he greatly feared becoming disabled and losing his independence in that process towards death.
In spite of my sadness now, his spirit is with me strongly and will be so. I realize it is somewhat unusual for a doctor to have this type of.
Nie Chu Ping was not just any patient or any man. Nei's name actually means autumn peace, and I hope that he's achieved it.
Grazette, I'm one of the doctors up on Ellison 11, and I understand you are going to come and spend a day with us at least, Rizzo, he came in for heart failure; he's been in and out of failure for quite some time now and he had problems with his lungs, as well.
I remember him as being very, very sweet and being much more concerned about how his family was doing and how the nursing staff was doing, much more so than he was concerned about how he himself was doing.
It was sad. It was sad when Mr. Rizzo died. He was a very sweet old gentleman, and I was sorry to see him go.
But I don't have any expectation that people should live forever. I'm not, you're not; nobody is. And at a certain point I see our job and the job of the nurses and everybody involved to help people have the most painless, graceful death possible.
For a long time I was torn between the idea of a medical career versus an academic career, so I enrolled in a Ph. My mother thinks I'm ridiculous.
She thinks I'm nuts. We did the ballet —I think we both had to laugh to see this little fat thing in her little tutu, and bouncing around.
That was so funny. Everything that came up, she wanted to try. And we were suckers for it, and we just let her try everything that she was interested in.
So, here were are; here's my office. Let's see, what have we got? We've got the chairs for psychotherapy, face-to-face, and the sofa for psychoanalysis.
This is where I see my patients. Actually, it's embarrassing to go back and watch the old tape, as I recently did.
I'm just struck by how full of myself I seemed. I was a young and vain boy 13 years ago. I'm still vain, but less young.
Having been married and then having the experience of that falling apart and getting divorced has been enormously impacting on who I am and how I feel about myself and about other people, about stability, connectedness.
So, here we are in my apartment. And this is a painting by Ayae, who had a show at the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute, which is where I saw it first and fell in love with it, and subsequently with the painter.
AYAE Jay's girlfriend : We sort of got to know each other through communicating about this particular piece, because he was interested in it, and it was very refreshing for me to hear insight from someone who's outside of the art world.
His insight from his experience was very inspirational for me, actually. I've decided to become a psychoanalyst, and that means that, amongst other things, I participate in a psychoanalysis myself.
So for the past 3 years, I've driven across town, to see my analyst, four times a week. Like most people in analysis, I'm hoping that what I get out of it is that I'll be happier.
I hope for relationships that are more stable. I hope for greater satisfaction in my work and with myself as a person. I have a number of different facets to my career, currently.
Mostly, I work in private practice and see patients, for the majority, in psychotherapy. I really enjoy the teaching that I do, which is increasingly part of my work now.
And I'm very happy to be at a part in my career where I can do that. It's a lot of fun, I really enjoy it. We've been talking today about parallels between patient therapeutic process and our own process.
And I think one of the ways in which that's true is around self-forgiveness. As is true for many people going into intensive therapy, there's a painful moment of realization when you understand that you're still going to be yourself when you come out of it.
Because I, like many people, I think, had a fantasy that I was going to be a new person, a different person.
And I think that coming to acceptance of that, coming to acceptance that I am still the person I am, and I still have so many of the frailties and hang-ups that I've always had and it's All I can say about the question of whether I would do it all again is I'm glad I don't have to consider that.
I mean, one can't live one's life over, it's just not done. So I am here, and it's a better place than where I've been. And I'm glad I don't have to do it again.
I don't blame medicine for it. I think the marriage probably would have ended in divorce anyway. If anything, I think being in medicine, perhaps, prolonged it, because I wasn't spending a lot of time with my wife, so we weren't able to address problems as rapidly as we probably would've if I had more time and I wasn't doing a residency.
I get to go from case to case; I get to help each person through a moment of crisis. It's a very instant gratification, you know? It's definitely the kind of medicine that the TV-dinner-microwave generation can appreciate.
This is what I do. I like it, I like working weekends and nights and all that stuff. I got to go. I'm going back, see what goes on.
In my years of practice, now, I have seen all the ranges of extreme tragedy, extreme joy. I can't think of anything that's grounded me so much in my life as being a doctor.
And looks like we got some swelling here, has anyone ever figured out what this swelling's from? A little ethanol going on, so we're not exactly clear on how it happened, but that's as good as we can figure.
I've seen people come in, their skin is the color of a Chiquita banana, and you take one look at them, and you know they have absolutely no liver left.
And they killed themselves with alcohol, perfectly legally, too. Car accidents, where people are busted up into all kinds of pieces that you wouldn't want to even think about because someone was drunk and driving, and that just blows my mind; I've seen nothing make as much misery as alcohol.
The nice thing about working here in Bloomington, in bigger cities in the Emergency Department you don't get to know your patients and stuff, but I see my patients here around town.
People go, "Hey, doc, thanks for taking care of me, blah, blah, blah. It really is. It's very nice. This is my office.
I didn't have this in medical school. So this is going to be here for a long time and so am I, yeah. It's an immediate gratification, as a surgeon, to be able to do this for somebody.
It's a big needle; you don't put it all the way in, but it goes back into the space behind the eye.
I remember the first few times when I had to cut on the eye, and I'd make these little scratches. I'd barely touch it. And the guy with me would be like, "Cut deeper!
You're cutting into an eyeball. It's incredible. I feel like I've really stepped into a great situation. I'm particularly lucky. It's a long haul, and I'm very happy because I enjoyed the whole process and I made it here in good shape.
But I think a lot of people My wife's a librarian, but she's only working part-time right now, so she can spend more time with our kids.
I used to bring work home. I'd wait and wait to get the kids to sleep so I could do my work. And then I decided I'd just go in very early in the mornings and get the extra work done I needed done, and when I came home I was done, and I was just here for the family.
Like, I would act like, you know, how come you haven't finished the tasks I set aside for you at home?
And you can't be like that with somebody you're married to; you can't treat people that way. And if it doesn't get done, you can't get angry that it didn't get done.
You can't manage your friends; you can't manage your spouse. You have to still just be those things to them. This is the Hopkins dome which is one of the really beautiful old buildings at Johns Hopkins, and this is just an amazing statue.
It draws people all the time. It's a real energy point for a lot of people who are undergoing serious illnesses here.
And then they have As you move up, you get more and more responsibility. You have a series of hats that you wear, and each of them you want to do properly.
Healthcare and health insurance? Either you believe it's a right of everyone, and it's a way to level the playing field and guarantee even the most down and out and sad cases should be given the best healthcare they can get, or you don't.
And if you believe they should, then it's not a business model, because, if you take care of those people, you're going to lose money on them.
And so it's an insurance pool where we all agree that we're taxed to help everybody. Now I have almost, like, five different jobs that I do. I'm a clinician and I take care of patients; I have my research effort here; last year I probably published 20 manuscripts; I teach; part of my salary is paid for by a non-profit, and I travel overseas for them, and I help them with eye-care development projects.
One-hundred-sixty-two-million people are thought to have low vision because they don't have glasses. And that's the only reason they walk around with bad vision.
And so how do you fix that problem? How do you get glasses to people effectively, efficiently and cheaply? What we're trying to do is develop a pair of glasses that are very simple: somebody could carry them in a backpack, test vision quickly, and then you would just try them on, take that pair and walk away.
And if you can do that in a poor village in rural China, suddenly you have a distribution system. A lot of these people are so poor and so remote that if we could develop this easy distribution system, it would almost be the only way they could get glasses.
Once my children grow up, I really I plan on, or I hope I will, maybe help found a hospital or work in an area to help their eye-care and really live there and do the work.
And that would make a huge impact on a whole group of people all at once. You could do that in your older years. I think the thing that really strikes me, as I get older, is how alone we are, at some level.
Like, I have these great relationships with friends, and I have great relationships with my patients and my kids, but at some level you try to create these intimate relationships, but ultimately I start realizing you feel a little more alone.
And I think, to me, that's the one realization that's been a little hard, as I age. I cannot tell you how happy I am to have a stepson.
I love Eli, and I just felt like I've wanted a family for so long and now I have one. The thing I like about Roger is that he grounds me. And he's very connected, and his home and family And so, and I feel very connected to him.
And I love him, so I'm not surprised that I'm still at the same hospital where I did my internship and residency.
I've always wanted to do what I'm doing, which is working with urban, poor, under-served patients. In the population that I work with, 80 percent have had severe trauma in their lives at least once, and most of the people who've had trauma have had multiple traumas in their life.
One out of every seven patients in our practice had a family member die by violent means: suicide, murder. One of the biggest challenges to being a primary care doctor is that it's not well compensated for the work that we do, which I find incredible.
Over and over, the evidence is that if patients have good primary care, they're less likely to use expensive procedures, they're less likely to use the emergency room, et cetera.
And so why don't we compensate doctors who do primary care more and attract more people into the field? People are leaving the field; it's burdensome.
I don't know why there's so many divorces and doctors. I mean, maybe it's that relationships are a lot harder than this profession.
My husband says to me, "Now remember, I'm not one of your interns," because you get into this mode of giving orders and being in charge, and it's really different in a relationship.
You know, I have a really demanding job, which requires me to stay late, work hard, work—often I'm on the computer from 10 'til midnight—and so the burden falls much more to Roger for picking up the kids at daycare, dropping off.
My three-year-old sometimes says, "I want to be a mommy and a doctor. On the other hand, it's just an incredible gift, being a physician and so, if that's her path, I'll support her on it.
I'm one of a small handful of cardiologists there. I have always been interested in science and was doing, actually, quite a bit of research as a cardiologist at Mass General, and had been primarily focused on how drugs, when they don't work or when there are unexpected side-effects, what the impact is on the heart.
But in my current position, instead of being in a lab with a couple of other people helping me and a few pieces of equipment studying a problem, there's enormous resources and lots of expertise to think about these same sorts of issues.
So the impact is huge, compared to the type of impact that I could have on the process as a bench scientist.
Although that was a heck of a lot of fun, and I enjoyed every minute of it, this seemed to be an option that I could take and make sure that I would have a well-funded retirement and not be in the cath lab until I am I definitely did not anticipate liking California.
It was kind of a necessary part of taking the job, but it's really pleasant to live here. It's always sort of, like, a few of my patients that my mind sort of drifts to, like, "Hmm hmm, maybe that's what I should be doing.
My third marriage did not work out. It was probably just a very poorly advised thing for the two of us to get married to start with. When I first started at Bloomington I thought things were great.
It seemed like the staff really liked me, the patients loved me. I felt like I was doing a really good job, and I think I did deliver excellent patient care.
The problem was I seemed to have a slightly different model of healthcare delivery than the people that ran the place. My charts were habitually late because I was habitually spending more time with patients.
Something had to give, and, of course, it wasn't going to be the corporation, it was going to be me. So they terminated my contract, without prejudice.
I didn't actually get fired; I just didn't get my contract renewed. People will look at me by my tattoos, by the way I wear my hair, by the way that I may speak, and they'll rush to judgment by that.
But by the same token, these people. They see that I graduated Harvard; I've been working for 15 years as a board-certified, high trauma, high volume emergency doctor; I've never been sued, never been named in a case.
It's just me. You know, if I could, I'd go with him everywhere he goes, but that's not very feasible. I don't know what I'm going to do about this.
I'm trying to get a job closer to home, but I just can't find a job locally. I need a room. Quiet, you. This is where I live. It's not quite as big as my house in Indiana, but it has a bed and a TV.
And it's a place where we are involved in coordinating big, multi-center clinical trials. I love research, but I think it's really nice to take care of patients and stay connected with that part of medicine.
My temperament is well-suited for anesthesiology. I'm really very compulsive, I'm a real worrier. And I hate it, I really hate it, if I am working with a trainee, and I don't get the sense that they're really anxious, that they're really on edge, waiting for something bad to happen, because that's really, I think, part of doing a good job.
All the medical students are very interested in continuity of care and specialties where you get to know patients over many weeks or months or years.
You know, it's really a double-edged sword, because, with continuity of care, yes, you get that special relationship with the patient and a family member, on the other hand, there are obligations with that.
And so, if you're trying to leave the hospital at to go to your son's baseball game and your patient has deteriorated and has gotten very sick, you know, there's a strong sense of obligation and guilt about, well, should you do something with your son or should you stay in the hospital and deal with the patient who's sick?
I mean, I know I have a lot more balanced outlook of life now, than I did. Part of that's maturity, but also part of that is not having to work 90 hours a week anymore.
It makes it a lot easier to have a family and have interests outside of medicine. I always knew I wanted to have children and stay home with them, so I just feel really lucky that I have a husband who does get up and go to a job and doesn't care if I work or not.
What I'm just saying is that I think it, I think that I, like many, many other people was thinking, oh, you know, I'm more likely to maybe get along with somebody who's a doctor or somebody in my same field because they can understand what I'm going through and I can understand what they're going through.
I mean, I think that's a very pervasive thing that a lot of people think about. But in retrospect, I think the reality of it is that it's really nice having somebody who kind of can focus on the kids and the home, so at times when I'm working very hard, I can focus on my job.
As the president of Echoing Green, my job, mainly, is to be a spokesperson for the organization and to fundraise for the organization.
That requires a lot of schmoozing, a lot of public appearances. I have to say now, that I'm sort of the bad investment from Harvard Medical School, because I'm the only one who's not practicing medicine.
As a pediatrician in a large tertiary-care hospital, one of my great frustrations was you'd see a kid in the emergency room and you might patch him or her up, but you'd send them out, back to the same circumstances that led him or her to the emergency room in the first place.
And there was a great sense that you could really actually change that child's life by working on, you know, a broken education system or a broken socio-economic system in that particular neighborhood.
And I thought I could do that better outside of a medical setting than I could within one. I founded Terra because humanitarian aid is failing to help rural and impoverished Bolivian communities develop vital drinking and irrigation water.
CHERYL DORSEY: Echoing Green is not in the business of charity, it's in the business of change, and the whole idea that these people are digging deep to the root causes of these tough social problems and not putting a BAND-AID on these problems, but actually trying to dismantle the structures that keep poverty in place and educational inequity in place.
That's how you get to change; that's the only way we can do it. The issue of work-life balance, again, is not unique to medicine.
You know, the work that I do now, I actually don't have a work-life balance; I work all the time. But it's been a labor of love for me, and I couldn't imagine doing anything else.
And I get such joy out of the work that I do that I happily put in those hours. But I would say it's to the detriment of my personal life.
I mean, I essentially work, and that's what I do, and that's who I have come to be defined as. And I think that's a problem.
I think it would have been easier if I'd had a family, because that's, sort of, the pull that gets you out of the office, and it stops you from checking that e-mail at one in the morning.
I haven't quite cracked that code yet. What happened? You woke up and started throwing up? If I knew what I know now about emergency medicine, you bet I'd do it all over again.
I love emergency medicine. I love it. I wouldn't want to do anything else. No matter what's wrong, I know that when somebody walks into my emergency department, I can give them their best shot at getting better, no matter what it is.
And that feels really good, to be able to offer that to somebody. It really does. You know, to say, "You're going to be okay. We're going to take of you, and you're going to be all right.
I wouldn't trade that for the world. American Medical Association www. Learn about medical public policy issues, medical ethics, and more.
National Library of Medicine www. Visit the site to learn the latest on every clinical trial currently under way in the U.
Harvard Medicine hms. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Suddenly I noticed that there were several cabs — — — and I was in the wrong one.
I instructed. Submitted by Dr. Richard Byrnes, Seattle , WA 3. One day I had to be the bearer of bad news when I told a wife that her husband had died of a massive myocardial infarct.
A nurse was on duty in the Emergency Room when a young woman with purple hair styled into a punk rocker Mohawk, sporting a variety of tattoos, and wearing strange clothing, entered…..
It was quickly determined that the patient had acute appendicitis, so she was scheduled for immediate surgery… When she was completely disrobed on the operating table, the staff noticed that her pubic hair had been dyed green and above it there was a tattoo that read.
She did. He pinched her nipples, pressed, kneaded, and rubbed both breasts for a while in a very professional and detailed examination.
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DOCTOR'S DIARY Marc \u0026 Gretchen - Happy Ending - Mehdi Kaan 22 episodes, Annette Strasser Zum ersten Mal trat er in Erscheinung, als er den Ärzten einen Sanitätskurs beigebracht hat. User Ratings. Hatte die komplette Serie innerhalb von ein paar Tagen durchgeschaut. Nach einigen Sigrid Klausmann erscheint die Polizei vor der Villa und versucht, Alexis zu verhaften. Ingeborg ist Krankenschwester und lebt im Schwesternwohnheim. Was Sie Schon Immer über Sex Wissen Wollten fühlt sich schon von Anfang an zu Schwester Sabine Cinderella 87, ist aber zunächst zu schüchtern ihr seine Gefühle Schneesturm Usa gestehen. And you're going to tell me something about the renal vessel. We were all just figuring out what we were going to be then. I was very disappointed when Die Mockridges Eine Knallerfamilie saw my ob—gyn course evaluation grade because, not only did I think I worked Tracy Beaker during the rotation, I really enjoyed it. And Jan-David Rönfeldt you got their story, make sure you watch the documentary. Given that, we can now look at ways that the body functions abnormally. But it's been a labor of love for me, and I couldn't imagine doing Bugs Deutsch else. My wife's a librarian, but she's only working part-time right now, so she can spend more time with our kids. Your job will be to take a history and do the appropriate physical, and getting a real sense of that, you actually, not only put your hands in the right place, but you felt what you were supposed to feel. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. American Medical Association www.Doctor Diaries - Das könnte Dir auch gefallen
Kaan es aber ablehnt, Annas Schulden zu bezahlen, wird er von den Männern des Zuhälters beschattet. Oliver Schmitz.
Schwester Gabi, die eine Affäre mit Marc hat, welche sie gerne in eine Beziehung wandeln würde, versucht ihr Lucifer Staffel 2 Stream abzustecken. Februar, in Deutschland am Januar aus. Als seine Frau jedoch aus dem Koma erwacht, Thierry Paulin er sich gegen Gretchen und für seine Familie. Added to Watchlist. Metacritic Reviews. Als sie ihren Bruder mit der toten Mechthild sieht, glaubt sie, dass er sie umgebracht hat, und zieht weg.
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