Saturday, August 6, 2011

You just don't want to know!

I was really pumped to be going to the Central Prison to do some actual dentistry after doing none the first rotation.  I happened to wear my salmon-colored scrubs and so I thought that it would be appropriate to take a 'first day' picture:
Well the first day I had orientation, I was with an NP who was super paranoid and didn't want to talk to me at all- long story short, she thought that I was a female inmate (at an all male prison).  As others on rotation at jails/prison know you just walk around the inmates which is very intimidating.  The next day, I wore red scrubs. In the prison the next door doesn't open until the one behind is closed- and on this second day my next door wasn't opening. I couldn't figure out why until I finally was let through and the officer said, 'sorry we were confused with your red... we thought you were a death-row inmate (who wear red jumpsuits) and couldn't figure out how you got out.'  So the third day I was like, forget scrubs I'll just wear black slacks and a blue dress shirt.  As I got in the elevator, someone asked me, 'new mental health doc?'  I said, 'no I'm in dental.'  apparently blue dress shirt on black slacks = mental health doctors-- AHH go figure...

Every regularly scheduled appointment is $5 which includes follow-ups, and every emergency appointment is $7.  Must be nice to get a filling for $5.  Or a root canal for $5, or 5 teeth pulled for $5, or a upper and lower denture with 6 appointments for $5- I'm just saying...

The current clinic is TINY, but there is a brand new hospital that will be up and running in October.  I got to take a tour and it is really nice- huge, like a private office.  The pay for a state employed dentist isn't the best, but the benefits are great if you stay with it long enough (just pluggin for any of you curious generalists, although I heard Tran really liked it there). 

I also took a tour of the execution area which is not currently in use as there is no death penalty right now.  It was super creepy, but something I thought was interesting is that the inmate can request any type of drugs they want before they receive their lethal injection.  So basically they can be high as a kite on anti-anxiety, for example,so they aren't even aware of what is going on... no quite the green mile.

The doctors and assistants are very helpful and informative.  Many of the officers are also very friendly and answer all my begging questions.  I have been watching tons of prison shows and just saw the movie Death Race.  I have tons of great stories (lots of broken jaws, mental health patients, learning how to use a baton) but what I have learned is that you do NOT want to know your patient's past.  It is near impossible not to pass judgment when you know the reason they are in prison, so it is best to maintain your professionalism and just not know.

One last thing for anyone interviewing soon: the doctors are interviewing for new assistants right now for the new clinic and have been very frustrated with some of the answers.  If you remember, Dr. Leonard explained to us that when interviewing someone you cannot ask personal information that could be discriminatory.  For example, they ask 'tell us about yourself'.  What not to say: 'i love people and would like to work here because i'd be good'  what to include: where you went to school, what you have done a lot of, what motivates you, etc. 

Hope everyone has a great last week.  I'll see you all soon, but not before I change my last name :)
- soon-to-be Kelly Goeckner



Monday, August 1, 2011

OMFS Rotation

We are having an awesome time!!!



- Shenan and Josiah

Senegal Rotation - Weeks 1&2

Surrounded by the Atlantic ocean, the city of Dakar is perched on the west most coast in Africa. As such, we experience both the heat and constant cool breeze as we drive through the relatively developed city.  While Dakar is by all means a city in the developing world, it is more developed than many cities in Sub-S. Africa (I hate to generalize so forgive me). Developed shopping areas, organized beaches and even theme parks pass you by as you drive down the well paved roads of the main roads/high ways. But like many economically deprived communities, blatant contradictions exist. Neighborhoods with nice landscapes may lead to dirt roads with litter and even open sewage. Away from the city, villages are filled with trash and debris and so much dust that it’s impossible to pass a day without being drenched in it. But villages and cities are also filled with wonderful people, good food and amazing music (more to come on that later). In fact, all of Senegal is.
Ben and I are living GOOOOOD. Our host mother is very loving and sweet and has a house in the city. We have 1 host sister who is 12 and  3 host cousins visiting from France . The culture is very open, so the house can be filled with cousins, uncles, friends , coming and going in between and during meals.  Meals are eaten on 1 huge platter, so that took getting used to, but it’s come along just fine. We have been taken in as family by everyone, so we are really just having a good time. The food is amazing and the only downside is I’ve officially gained 100 pounds..but who the heck is counting eh??? We have our own rooms and bathrooms, with AirConditioning (not present in the main rooms of the house), so we really lucked out. Unlike in the US, electricity here, even in the city is not always constant and A/C is a luxury (even though we hit over 100 degrees many times.) So they pay more than we even pay to have airconditioniner or a generator (used when the electricity in the  neighborhood goes out..lasting sometimes for hours). Not everyone has AC or a generator either..infact the average person doesn’t have it.
  Ben and I were fortunate enough to explore the city with our host family members. We’ve seen their “uptown”, called Centerville, which houses major banks, embassies and other government facilities.  We’ve been to various beaches, all with their own personalities.  While at the beach, we’ve played in the clean Atlantic water and watched the sunset, often times buying things from vendors. One of the beaches was located next to a former volcano erruption site, so it was naturally decorated with huge rocks and the accompanying beautiful sea life.
For the first week, I worked in the Fann public health dental clinic. The clinic is part of the Fann medical and Dental University, similar to UNC and it’s various schools and clinics.  After the introduction, we were separated and put to work directly. I performed some extractions and also did a patient medical/dental history exam in French. I enjoyed this experience, since it was my first experience in Francophone Africa with patients. While
I was impressed with the 4 operatories and their ability to provide dental care to people who can’t afford it otherwise.  I was also impressed with their administration and their organized way of tracking patients, treatments and payments.  With this said, I have seen some things that needed improvement. Basic sterile practices were lacking, like covering the operatory chairs, or using different napkins for each patient. Serious sterile violations were taking place, such as the fact that we used the same exact round bur on every single patient that was treated. In between patients, the bur was wiped down with alcohol gauze, often by an ungloved assistant. If you gasped at this, you are not alone. But it’s not as simple as you think.  The cost for supplies are very expensive and they already get low funding to begin with. I spoke with a clinic administrator and she told me they sadly have to rely on donations, which come and go. She actually showed me the stash of supplies and I they had only 8-10 new burs!!! And I think most of them were round burs.  I am currently determined to help them get more sterilization supplies and tons of dental supplies, especially burs and anesthesia!!
 Another major concern was their lack of anesthesia. Due to lack of affordability, anesthesia was only certainly used for extractions. Otherwise, most operative were performed  sans anesthesia. Interestingly enough, many of the patients preferred treatment without anesthesia, expressing extreme fear of the needle. When I told the dentists that we couldn’t work on patients without anesthetizing them, they were puzzled and couldn’t imagine that we could use so much anesthesia. Because they have never had such an abundance of anesthesia to be able to do this.
The lack of sterile environment, spread of bacteria from patient to patient and minimal use of anesthesia were all things that reflected the lack of access to resources (information and products) in  this public clinic in an economically deprived population. If they can gain access to more materials, more information, and more updated procedures/research, then I think they could improve their effectiveness and reduce risk. Overall, I think situations like this help give new meaning to “disparity” or “lack of”. In most of the US, we would never allow a bur to simply be wiped down with disinfectant and reused (not that I know of). But we can also afford to be that way. The folks here who can’t afford fancy private Senegalese offices don’t have a choice and the doctors who are willing to provided community health services don’t can’t always afford to purchase supplies on their personal tab. So I refrain from judging them at all, and instead try to find solutions to help ameliorate their current condition.
All in all, the experience is proving to be everything I dreamed it would be. Being back on this side of the world is just amazing. So much is new to me, but equally familiar to some degree. I am really starting to think…hmmm maybe I don’t need to buy a beach house in Wilmington…maybe I need to buy one in Dakar LOL. Dakar is safe, friendly, delicious, filled with disparities yes, but overflowing with culture and amazing people. C’est  Bonne en Dakar. It’s ok in Dakar!! :0)
- Linda

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Asheville!

Hey all!
     I've been working with the Mission-St. Joseph Children's Hospital doing pediatric work in the OR. Mostly my days start at 6:30a and we treat 2-3 kids under general anesthesia each day ending around 4 or 5p. These children range from 1-9 in age (mostly pre-K) and have the saddest mouths I've even seen - mostly due to juice in bottles, Mountain Dew in bottles, this popular flavored sugar water called "Bug Juice" and horrible, horrible parental neglect (Fun fact though: on every questionnaire I've seen, the parents say they brush their child's teeth 2X a day). The patients are referred to us from all over Western NC and usually every tooth in their mouth has a cavity. There is certainly no shortage of practice on stainless steel crowns and pulpotomies! Our saddest case so far was last Friday when we had a 22 month old with completely bombed out teeth - so bad we could only save two canines with stainless steel crowns and had to pull all the rest.. The group I'm working with has been on a huge campaign in this part of the state to push for oral health education and even has a ToothBus with two dental chairs to provide work to elementary students in rural areas.
     Asheville is wonderful - Tyler Banachowski, Tim Chang, Vincent Ha, Matt Parr and I are all here scattered over various rotation sites. We've also met up with some GPR residents who graduated from UNC last year for baseball (and I see them occasionally on their anesthesiology rotation through the hospital). The food is marvelous, the hiking great and this past weekend we were here for the Bele Chere street festival, one of the largest in the US.

     Pictures below:


ToothBus - somewhere outside Brevard, NC

Inside: Two ADEC chairs, x-ray equipment, an autoclave and lots of Pixar movies!

Matt Parr and I with some recent UNC grads: Chris Planer, Jessica Oliver and Kasee Metcalf at the Asheville Tourist's baseball game 
Street graffiti downtown.
My favorite shirt so far has been "If you're too weird for Asheville, you're too weird". 
Vincent, Tim, Matt and I downtown at The Southern. Yes, that is lobster mac and cheese. And hell yes, it was delicious.

Bacon and Maple Syrup ice cream - AMAZING.
Going to get fat (and poor) eating my way through this place.



My mom came up one weekend and we went hiking along the Mountains to Sea trail right off the Blue Ridge Parkway.



Yay! We're halfway through this round - keep up the great dental work I know y'all are doing and please keep posting! If you're having trouble - shoot me an email.

E

Friday, July 22, 2011

Howdy from Clay County (Murphy)

Hey guys,

I laughed so hard from the previous post by Keyvan- but I do hope that your living situation gets better.  I'm really thinking that if they're doing drugs, the school should provide you some other housing there.  Have you notified anyone about this?

My rotation has been really great so far.  I also see a lot of kids but to my surprise the Clay County Health department- Dental Program started seeing adults as well.  I came here with low expectations but have been so pleased with the clinic and my living situation.

So, at first I was told that there is no AHEC housing close to the clinic and they asked the people in the community if anyone could provide me housing.  Luckily a very nice family practice doctor offered her beautiful home to me and here I am in a huge house with access to internet, kitchen and staying in a spacious room.  I have already started cooking in her kitchen and sharing the food with her since she doesn't like to cook and we spend our nights playing boggle or trying to find nerdy games on our iPads.

As far as the dental clinic, it's only about 5-10 mins away from this house which is awesome!  There are two dentists (very nice older gentlemen) with 4 dental assistants and 2 dental hygienists.  One of the dentists works only on Mondays and Tuesdays and he does all the extractions for kids and adults and SSCs and more complex cases for kids.  The other dentist works all 5 days (Mon-Fri) and only does fillings.  So the first 2 days I only hung out with the extraction dentist and he basically let me do whatever I wanted.  I later found out that he used to be an orthodontist for many years before he decided that he wanted to do general dentistry before he completely retired (interesting huh?).  The rest of the week the other dentist gave me all his appointments so I go by his schedule while he only checks the hygienists.  It has been so great because I'm really getting a feel for the real world dentistry and what it's like to be an actual dentist in a rural dental clinic.  I love the little kids here- they all have been super good.  I had a 5 year old girl who got up after her filling a couple of days ago and hugged me and said "I want you to always be my dentist."  That really made my day :).

One funny story is when I had a 26 yr old guy come in and the receptionist ran up to me before I saw the patient and she warned me that he has a really bad attitude and that I can get her if he causes me any trouble (being rude and such).  Well as soon as the pt walked in his whole demeanor changed and he said "I would have shaved if I knew this".  He then went on to tell me that he's been trying to pull out his tooth but all his attempts have failed and so he finally came to the dentist.  I introduced myself and told him that I would be taking care of him.  He said "YOU'RE GOING TO PULL MY TOOTH? GOOD LUCK WITH THAT".  So when I finally extracted # 30, he was so happy and walked out with a smile on his face saying "I'll let you pull out any of my teeth any day."  The receptionist was telling me that his attitude was completely different from when he was in the waiting room to when he walked out.

One thing that I've realized is that being in a rural area + a dental clinic = gross decay, no money, lack of education.  I also found out that there is no fluoride in the water here and that is not helping the situation at all.  And I was also told that the clinic I'm at doesn't really do amalgams because they started out as a pediatric clinic and so they only placed composite then and now it's too costly for them to add amalgam?!  I saw a 11 yr old girl yesterday who had all these deep cavities and I'm thinking in my head wow how did her situation get so bad.  First, she was super scared of the needle and I had to explain everything to her and finally convince her that it will just be a pinch.  Well she did really well and said it wasn't bad at all.  So I go to excavate the caries on #5 occlusal and it goes deep and deeper and finally I stop to feel the pulpal floor to see if I'm even getting close to any sound tooth structure and my explorer just goes right in the pulp (can we say carious pulp exposure).  Then I found out that luckily there is a really nice endodontist in the area that treats the kids with Medicaid or HealthChoice for free so we referred her there.  The dental assistant later told me that the reason why her teeth are in such bad shape is because her mother never brings her to the dentist and actually this time it was the grandmother who finally stepped up and brought her granddaughter.  It was just so sad and I felt so bad for the kid because that seemed like child neglect to me.

I have another interesting/crazy story that I faced yesterday and today I found out that it is somehow related to Eric Rudolph (The bomber and terrorist from Murphy, NC!!!).  Since I have already typed too much in this blog, I will share the story later so more to come...... ;)

Hoda

Kiddies, not so bad. Germs and pot, BAD!!!

Greetings Dental People!

My 3rd rotation is at Stanley County Dental. For those of you who are not familiar with this location (i.e. you are not a pedo gunner), this is an all pediatric place; as in all kids, 99% under 12 and most of them are referred to us by their dentists who refused to treat these little rascals (or, cutie patooties). Also almost all of them are Medicaid or HealthChoice patients. I must say I was dreading the fact that I have to treat kids from 8 to 5 for the next month, but honestly it is not that bad. My preceptor and the office staff are all incredibly nice and helpful.  The best part was going to OR for the first time yesterday, which I really enjoyed.  I did my first (actually first 5) SSC and pulpotomies and it’s a whole lot easier doing in on a knocked out patient.

HERE IS WHERE IT GETS INTERESTING:

On the other hand, what has been my nightmare so far is my living situation. I live in an old dormitory at Pfeiffer College in Misenheimer, NC. That’s right Misenheimer; google it. Their campus probably consists of 4 or 5 buildings and is in middle of BFE.

First day that I moved in, I was given like 3 different keys by the RA guy who took me into the apartment for a little tour. Before going in, as we were walking up the stairs he goes, “so we cleaned up a few days ago, but we were cooking last night and it may be a little messy around the apt”, then he opens the door to the apt and… O M G!!! The place looked like a tornado hit village that was rampaged by rats the next day.  I am talking about filthy dirty. Trash, dirty cloths and unidentified objects everywhere on the floor. Beer bottles on every corner. One beer bottle sitting on the table and half full was Corona but the “beer” inside was black. Later I saw a pack of chewing tobacco and found out that that “beer” is actually saliva and chewed tobacco!!! Then I see this 50 inch TV in the living room with a surround sound system (so much for no TV in the information email). According to the RA guy, my room was “specially” cleaned up for me. A bed with a dirty and stained mattress as if they snatched it from a hobo off of Franklin st. and lots of feathers (?!) on the floor and dust everywhere. Maybe my room was rented to a chicken with bladder issues, who knows? Bathroom was even more dirty. The toilet bowl looked like they poured tar into it; it had thick black stains in it. The RA guy then joyfully noted that I have a shower curtain as an addition to my 5 star luxury room that looked ok from outside but when I went to take a shower the next day and saw the inside was covered by colorful moldy spots. I think I spent  about 30 minutes Lysoling everything in the bathroom before putting my stuff on the counters.

Every night at around 10 o’clock my suitemates and a couple of others from other suites walk in with a stack of shooting-and-drug-cartel redbox movies and start watching movies until like 2-3 AM, putting their surround sound system into good use (my room is right next the living room). You may ask how they can stay up this late? The answer(s) is(are):

1-      They don’t have real classes or education for that matter that they need to worry about for the next day
2-      They drink about a 6 pack of energy drinks every night (not exaggerating)
3-      Sleep during the day…AND…
4-       I woke up the first night at like 1 AM to the sound of a guy coughing his lungs out followed by others laughing at him telling him that he can’t get high if he keeps coughing all the smoke out and that he is wasting all that pot!!!! They also have munchies and lighters all over the living room. Lovely!
5-      They probably take Adderall everyday since I heard one of them yelling at his GF telling her he needs only enough Adderall for the next few days and he can’t give her any.

Anyway, I have tried a couple of times telling them to turn the TV down after 11 PM so that we can have a symbiotic relationship for the next 4 weeks, but then they get high and so does the TV volume after an hour.

I was told by several people that I’m being “tested.” Here is my response:
I don’t know why or by whom I am being tested, but this four weeks better be deducted from the time- I’ll-be-spending-in-hell sentence.


Keyvan

p.s. I hope everybody else is enjoying their rotation J

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Columbus wasn't a hero - he was a murderer.

Hello from O-high-O, my beautiful friends.  I drove in yesterday, and Columbus is a bigger city than I was expecting.  Similarly, Nationwide Children's Hospital looks to be a bigger children's hospital than I was expecting, also.  I've been drowning my loneliness in premium root beer and books about ancient evils.

So far, I can sum up my entire experience with the following photograph:
More to come.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Penobscot Community Health Center

This is where we live:
Hamlin House - nice historic house that used to be occupied by Hannibal Hamlin, vice president to Abraham Lincoln.  It's about a 5 minute drive to the clinic, which is very convenient.

Kitchen.

TV room.

Somehow I got stuck in the smallest room in the house.  Most rooms have two beds.  We share the house with other dental and medical students.


This is where we work: 
Gabe in his operatory.  We get assigned an operatory and we get our own assistant as well.  It's incredibly nice not having to set up for each patient or clean up after yourself or suction for your own MOD #14 amalgam preps.

Break room - a place to chill during down time.  Free coffee, tea, and hot chocolate makes it nicer.  Clinic runs from 7:30am to 6pm, which would seem like long hours, but it goes by pretty quickly for the most part.


And this is where we play:
Beehive hike at Acadia National Park.  That's my roommate - a 3rd year dental student from Tufts.

Lobster at a lobster shack near Bar Harbor.

Baxter State Park, climbing Mt. Katahdin, the highest point of Maine.

At the top of Mt. Katahdin - also the northernmost point of the Appalachian Trail.

Chimney Pond in Baxter State Park.

Gabe enjoying the weather and ice cream at Bar Harbor.

Life is good in Maine - weather is perfect, people are nice, scenery is beautiful, seafood is delicious.  Clinic has been nice as well - we're given a lot more freedom and it feels more like "real-life" dentistry.  We see about 5-6 patients a day with mostly fillings, extractions, and some endo.  It's made me appreciate how well UNC has prepared us up to this point - particularly after talking to some of the other externs here from Tufts and Boston University.  They get into clinic a lot later than we do and it just seems as if they're a little less confident seeing and treating patients at this point than we are.  Well, except for endo - I feel like we're taught a lot of endo "knowledge" but I feel very limited in my ability to do much endo.  It seems like having most everything referred to grad endo has sheltered us from knowing how to deal with harder cases (which I had to do here.. ended up breaking a file in a patient's tooth, but that's another story.. at least I diagnosed her correctly, right?).  Also, dealing with the pedo patients here have humbled Gabe and I.  Gabe has had some rough bouts with pedo, an example being today when he had to restore two teeth in a patient who refused to sit still.  He ended up having to do a pulpotomy and place an amalgam (after multiple tries) in this patient while restraining himself from choking her - I think she was close to biting his fingers off and eating up the rubber dam.  I have had some tough pedo patients that I didn't really know how to deal with as well.  But maybe that's just because of our personalities, not due to our lack of training.  The attendings are pretty good to work with - pretty hands-off (sometimes to our detriment) - and the clinic is usually pretty busy.  Gabe and I have enjoyed it.  It makes it hard to want to go back to school to do dentistry.

With much <3 <3 <3 from Maine to our wonderful class of 2012ers,
-Tim and Gabe

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Hello from Lincolnton!

Hey everyone! It has been fun to read all the post on here. I've been at Lincoln Dental Services the past 2 weeks and I wish we did a whole year of rotations instead of at school!! It feels so nice to not worry about patients and just sit down and do dentistry. The dentist here is a general dentist who only sees children under 18 with Medicaid or HealthChoice (I think that's the name of the insurance).

The first week here was pretty slow bc it was the last week of school for the little kiddies so there were alot of broken or cancelled appts. But I've learned a couple cool tricks here so far. For instance, he does palatal anesthesia by going through the distal papilla of a tooth and waiting for the lingual side to blanch - it looks ALOT more atraumatic, the kids don't even flinch-compared to the regular palatal blocks that I have put some adult patients through =/. Also, he likes to talk about dentistry. Alot. Which I didn't mind one bit bc every free moment we had (which we had lots of it last week) he basically was going through his mind and vomiting years of knowledge into my brain. haha, maybe that wasn't the best choice of words.

It's picked up alot this past week though and Ive been doing a mix of SSC,fillings,ext, and loads and loads of sealants, which he sandblasts first before using the all in one bonding system. I've made a couple of kiddies cry already - but they deserved it! jk Last week this girl started crying when I was flossing the canine in order to put on the rubber dam, so mom didn't like it and made us stop the procedure. Then she started lieing (?) to the dentist that we didn't tell her we were flossing and that if she had known we were 'just flossing' she would have let us continue. Well dang lady, you were standing right beside me holding her hand and you couldn't see the white stringy thing in my hand?? Maybe I shouldn't be too hard on her bc she probably doesn't recognize what floss looks like :). But that was my mini drama of the week.

Oh yeah, it's also super awkward that the parents (90%) of them stay in the room while I'm working. Sometimes it's helpful bc they'll tell their kid to shut up and stop whining but most of the time it's not.

Overall, it's been pretty fun here. I enjoy being close to home and hanging out with my 2 nieces which are a handful to care for! I've gotten comfortable with the staff there, we sit around and eat lunch together and they've been catching me up on the office gossip, haha.

See everyone back in 2 weeks! :)

~Lana

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Back to school...

It's more exhausting to see two patients at the SOD than it is to see ten in the real world.

-Kev

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Bernstein Dental Center

Hi guys,

I first wanted to just say how awesome all of you are!  It has been so great reading all of your posts.  It sounds like everyone is getting a lot of great experience! 

I don't have a lot to report from my rotation yet.  I am at Bernstein Dental Clinic in Greenville, NC part of Greene Dental Services.  Everyone is super nice and helpful!  Last week was tough for me... I guess just getting acquainted with everyone and being comfortable enough to just dive into a procedure.  I am a lot more comfortable this week.   I am working with six doctors that rotate in and out of the clinic and it is interesting to see all of their takes on dentistry.  They have had a lot of great advice to offer.  And, they all call me "Dr. Bowen", which sounds pretty good to me! 

Today was a pretty productive day.  I saw three patients for extractions, did an operative appointment, took impressions for maxillary and mandibular dentures and poured them up, and did two comprehensive exams.  Pretty good I would say!



I am staying with my brother and his wife which is great, because I have not spent much time with him since I left for college.  I have also gotten to visit with my mom who lives about 30 minutes from here.

I hope everyone enjoys the rest of your rotation.  See you in July!  Take care!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Shenan and Anna Do America!!

We made it! After around 32 hours of cross country driving (and listening to about every CD we have ever owned) we made it all the way to Flagstaff, Arizona.  We started early in the morning on 6/2 and made it to Little Rock, AR by that evening after a brief lunch stop in Nashville. Day two after a quick off road to Muskogee, OK ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iYY2FQHFwE ) we reached Oklahoma City for lunch and a stop at the Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial.  If you've never had a chance to see that memorial, I totally recommend it.  We spent the night on day two in Amarillo, TX...not much there except the Big Texan Steak Ranch (http://www.bigtexan.com/) which we decided to pass on. There's always the way back to take the 72 oz steak challenge. On day 3, we stopped in Albequerque, NM's Old Town area which is really nice and finally drove into Flagstaff around 3 in the afternoon. 

Things I learned on the trip: 1. Crossing times zones going west is awesome; driving back losing hours is going to be terrible  2. There is a Sonic at every other exit from Arkansas to Arizona 3. There is literally nothing in Arkansas



Flagstaff is a great place to live.  It's kind of like a big Chapel Hill/Carboro.  Lots of hippies, natural foods, and live music. The first day here, we happened upon the Flagstaff Hullabaloo which was a downtown festival chock-full of chainmail, wings, and other extravagant costuming.  We have also been very impressed with all of the hiking/outdoor sports to be had and have tried to do at least one thing a day after work. We have seen the Meteor Crater, Sunset Crater, Wupatki National Monument, Elden Mountain, and the Grand Canyon so far. Today we plan to go to Sedona.



Our Clinic experience so far has been really great. We have been jumping around from the Winslow (base) Clinic to two other clinics located far into the Navajo Reservation at Leupp and Dilkon.  Everything on the reservation is subject to Indian Law, so as I was told on one of the trips out there, "If you want to speed you better have $50 or a case of beer ready."  Generally the clinics are set up in a double wide trailer, but have CCD receptors, new ADEC chairs, and one site even has continental delivery system.  Most are associated with other medial clinics also for people living on or near the reservation.  Specialists come in on a  weekly basis to take care of some of the more specific professional needs such as implant placement, oral surgery, and orthodontics.  Basically, there is a lot going on all the time at this very small clinic and I know that we are both excited about what we may get to see in the coming weeks.



There are two Tufts students with us and they are both nice.  Interestingly, one is a guy that I worked with at UNC before starting dental school.  We saw them the first two days and haven't seen much since due to travel to different clinics.  Tufts students can get credit for endo on rotations! Wouldn't that be nice...  Like many of you have commented, I feel and have been told by our attendings that students from NC are very prepared for these rotations.  I haven't noticed it, but apparently even the other students who are here with us are not as comfortable jumping right in as we are.  Go UNC!!

Vegas next weekend if anyone wants to meet us!!

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Made it to Kenya!

Chris and I made it to Kenya at 3:30am local time (we're 7 hours ahead of NC) and got to spend the day with Josiah before putting him on a plane back to Chapel Hill this evening. We rode pikis (Kenyan dirt bikes) and chased zebras, antelope and giraffes across the Great Rift Valley for the majority of the day. 


Riding the pikis


Checking out the HUGE spikes on the acacia bushes

Giraffes!


So that Chris and I don't inundate this blog with all our Africa pictures, we've set up another site at: Kenya Blog

Good luck to all of you all returning to group practice and safe travels to everyone getting to their sites!

-Elise and Chris 

Friday, June 3, 2011

Assitants Make the World Go Round...

A critical point about assistants:

Make sure they have more than one CD in their operatory stereo.  Otherwise, you could find yourself stuck with four solid weeks of mid-90's Keith Sweat.  I'm not saying that I don't appreciate working on a four year old to the sound of "Your body, all over my body, your body, all over my body..." but it certainly adds a hilarious degree of surrealness to an already insane process.  The assistant is spectacular, and receives my near-constant teasing very well, but a man can only take so much. 

Hope everybody's ending their rotations well.  Good luck to the a-d'ers, and God help those of us returning to school.

-Kev

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Maine

Greetings from Maine! It has been fun reading about everyone’s experiences. Courtney and I are in Bangor, ME, staying at a house built in 1851 which used to be the home of Lincoln’s vice president, Hannibal Hamlin. We have had housemates from the dental schools at University of Iowa – no, they have not heard of Dr. Eric Rivera, and Tufts, and medical students from the University of New England. There are also dental students from Boston University at the clinic. It has been interesting to find out about the different dentistry programs. It seems that New England schools provide somewhat more limited clinical experience while Iowa’s program is very similar to UNC.

The dental clinic is a huge facility currently being expanded to about 40 chairs. The construction was completed earlier this year and they are putting together and stocking the operatories in the new wing. There are six full-time dentists, four GPR residents and four other externs. There are eight hygienists and they just added six new dental assistants. It is a large operation and they serve a lot of patients. They are starting a new pedo residency program this summer and are also expanding the existing GPR program. In addition to the federal programs, there is MaineCare which covers everything for children through age 21 and provides free care or discounted fees on a sliding scale for adults who qualify based on income. For example, endo and post/core are covered under MaineCare and the crown is around $200-300.

We have an assigned operatory and an assistant who works with us. It has been really nice not to have to schedule patients, to set up and break down operatories, and to balance mirror, handpiece and suction. The work is mainly restorative, extractions and endo on both adults and children. We get to use the rotary ProTaper for instrumentation and Touch ‘N Heat for vertical condensation and backfill for endo, which has been a great learning experience. They also use gutta percha which requires only a main cone instead of a million little accessory cones.

We have tried to make the most out of our Maine experience, despite the rainy weather and temperatures in the 60s for the first two-three weeks. We visited Acadia National Park and Cadillac Mountain which are about an hour from here. We also went to Bar Harbor, a small waterfront town and a popular vacation spot. A few of us hiked on Dorr Mountain which is in Acadia.

Boston is less than four hours away and a great weekend trip, although it wasn’t a good ideaR to drive there because it was difficult to pahk the cah in the city without going broke. Anyway, the weather was warm and I had a wicked good time walking along the Charles River, sightseeing and trying some great food on Newbury Street, which is a mix of historic houses, shops and restaurants. Mike’s Pastry is a popular place in Boston’s Little Italy for cannoli and other Italian desserts so we made a stop there to overdose on sugar. Boston is a very nice, walkable city with a lot of history.

Georgi


Cadillac Mountain


Acadia National Park

Making our way

It was a hike :)

We are almost there

1270 ft

On top of Dorr Mountain

Chocolate-covered cannolo from Mike's Pastry in Boston...

View from across the Charles River

Pooh Bear's La Rez in Cambridge

Clinic

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Craigslist Craziness: I couldn't make it up if I wanted to

So I have had the craziest weekend ever- straight out of Jerry Springer.  I've wanted to move out of the craigslist place I have been in for a month because of these 2  cats- I hate cats and everything about them, mostly their hair.  I lived with a single mother and her daughter in a 5 bedroom house in South Bethesda in a really nice neighborhood.  Turns out this lady was just renting and it seems like she needed extra cash flow so she was renting out the extra room.  Anyways, it was in a posh neighborhood and easy to get to the metro and grocery store, etc.  So even though the 18yr old daughter always had her techno music too loud and the mother didn't clean any part of the house ever... I thought I would suck it up for 23 days unless I found something super better.
 I did notice when I moved in that the mother had a black eye, but I didn't want to be rude and ask about it.  One night she comes home and is screaming at some man on speaker phone like "you piece of  crap, why don't you just go back to your wife" - no, seriously.  So like an hour later I am on the phone with my dad and the man that she was talking to (I suspect) comes over in the house and is like screaming cussing her out for like 15 mins.  (Yes, the daughter was there too).  I just stayed in my room and was thinking that I was in a crazy house.  My dad was like, 'just mind your buisiness you don't know the situation.' BUT, I've watched a lot of TV in my little life and I KNOW this situation!!
 Well the daughter goes away on Friday to go live with her dad in Colorado for the summer.  That night (last Friday), this man comes over to the house and ends up spending the night; well that sucks because the bathroom doesn't have a lock on it and I refuse to shower when a strange man could come get me... so I don't (eww, I know).  In the morning I was introduced to her 'friend Bob.'  I had plans with my little brother and so I was like 'hi and bye'.  So after spending the day out at the Air and Space Museum at the Dulles Airport in VA (which is incredible) and going on a hike along the Potomac, Brian and I go back to my place for dinner.  Then I take him to the metro so he can go back to his school.
 When I get back to my place homeboy Bob and momma-lady are smoking mary jane and drinking some wine.  They are very polite and offer me some, but needless to say I was sketched out. I was like - I have to get out of this place.  So I pack all my stuff and want to go, but I don't want to make a scene so I decided I would leave either super early in the morning or when they left.  Naturally, I couldn't shower again that night and got no sleep bc they were super loud and obnoxious right next door to me. Well they wake up at 4 and are chatting super loud and then go to the kitchen at 6 something.  I am like scared to leave bc I don't want to make a scene, plus this man is at least verbally abusive, so I am just watching TV hoping they would leave- even though I can hear guitar playing.  Sooooo, a cell phone alarm is going off in their bedroom for like 15 mins and it is making me mad bc I can't listen to my TV show- so I decide to go tell them.  But when I go to the kitchen, they weren't there- they were in the basement.  So I gathered my stuff (took 4 trips to the car) put the key on the desk and left.  My heart rate was 500000BPM :) 
  But then I was homeless... so I went to go stay at my brothers dorm and spent all day calling people to move- but no one wanted me.  I called 11 convents even!  I didn't want to rent from another stranger and so I was calling friends of friends. I am now safe with a friend's family, praise the Lord.  It is pretty far from my work (took an hour and 30 mins to get here by public transportation today!!), but all is well.

Moral: Don't get a room off craigslist... it's like a box of chocolates- you never know what you're gunna get 


In other news, I got 0 results from my week long experiment and so I hung out in the dental clinic for a while and I had just missed a  25yr old girl with metastatic breast cancer who needed 4 hopeless teeth extracted who had been on bisphosphonates for 3 years currently going through chemo therapy... treatment plan?
I say nothing, but one doc said cut off the crown and bury the roots (with out root canals bc that is too risky). What do you think?


Kelly

An encounter with gutta percha

I can't believe our first rotation is almost over; these 4 weeks have flown by and I feel like I've been in this other dimension this whole time. Anyways it'll be back to reality on Monday!
My rotation at St. Luke's-Roosevelt hospital has been interesting and eye-opening. Today I did my first root canal procedure outside of the dental school and... gasp! away from the comforts/confines of the Endo department.
Examples: They only take 1 radiograph here, and it's the master cone radiograph.
They only have stainless steel files and rotary instruments, so you twiddle and ream with the same files.
No accessory cones... the sealer fills the extra space.
And this was my first time using gutta percha, which feels different than Resilon and doesn't sear as easily.

On another note, guess what this is:
On Thursdays I spend the day at another St. Luke's hospital, where the OMFS department is located. They have the oldest xray machines I've ever seen. To expose the radiographs you press that red square in the upper right corner. Umm yeah.

Here's another interesting picture I came across and had to share with everybody! There's also an Amalgamated Bank.

See you all soon!

sabine

Last week in NoVA

Whoa, I mean, who can top an inside-out face and a giraffe chase, Josiah!?!? Awesome. Or a pedophile. Wait.

My rotation in Virginia has been fun over the long weekend because Drew came up to visit from NC. We went to the 'famous' Georgetown Cupcake in D.C. (of DC cupcakes on TLC).  They really were as amazing as people say and true to the hype. 
The icing is so light and deliciously fluffy, and the cupcakes are super moist. OMG so GOOOOOD!
 
And these cupcakes totally have to do with dentistry because.... they are filled with sugar that causes tooth decay. And I am ridding the world of about a dozen of them, with the help of my husband. We are superheroes. Sugar-fighting superheroes. 
I also went out canoeing at the local lake with my brother and his friends (and Scout) searching for turtles to put in my brother's new aquarium. No turtles, but Scout had fun getting dunked in the water because it was like 100 degrees).
She had a blast.

Hope everyone else had a lovely Memorial Day Weekend! Many thanks to those who serve and who have family members who serve in the military! I know I'm proud of my Air Force poppa!
XOX
Tay

Monday, May 30, 2011

Small Talk with the Inmates

As part of my orientation to the prison system, they told me to not develop relationships with the inmates, not ask them personal questions and not divulge any personal information about myself to them.  So completely opposite of my appointments at the dental school, there is little to no conversing that takes place.  And when it does, it's awkward small talk at best - from last week:


Inmate: This is better than Obama-care, I've been getting free dental care for 16 years
Me: Well that's one way to look at the positive side
Inmate: Yeah, tell your friends to stay away from marijuana, that mess landed me 30 years in here...actually, I could go for a joint right now

Needless to say, the past three weeks have been very interesting.  I've done a bunch of fillings, some extractions, dentures for an 80 year old murderer who held a police officer hostage in 1951, finished up some partials for a pedophile, a root canal on a drug dealer who caught a baseball with his mandibular incisors, and an admissions exam on a 78 year old MD who was just arrested for insurance fraud.  

4 more days in the big house, and I'm not planning on ever going back!
Melissa

Africa

No crazy stories to report from the other side of the globe (Melissa, yours was the best).  Lots of people need their teeth fixed.  I have 3 chairs to cover.  On our busiest day so far I saw 19 patients.  Assistants are amazing; I want to bring one back with me to school.  


Free fibula surgery today.  Kinda blew my mind…. 11 hours later my mind was tried, but still amazed.  



I've been riding my dirt bike on the plains every chance I get, always chasing/terrorizing the wildlife.  :)



Not looking forward to going back to the USA (or dental school).  Maybe Mumford would just let me stay here the second rotation too?   HA!    

Friday, May 27, 2011

Water, water everywhere!


The basement of Brauer has been evacuated under several inches of water. First flood of Old Dental leading into MacNider is under 3 inches of water and rising. Hide your kids, hide your wife - the dental school is flooding!


Steven and Tim - flood survivors.