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25 - Sarah Yong - Making an excellent start to an intensive care career

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Content provided by Andrew Davies. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Davies or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

What are the biggest challenges when beginning as a fully-fledged intensive care clinician?

How do you best use your senior colleagues when your experience bank is still small?

What can you do to help achieve gender equity in intensive care medicine?

These are some of the questions you’ll ponder as you listen to the latest Mastering Intensive Care podcast guest Dr Sarah Yong from Melbourne.

Having started off 2018 with two “Best of 2017” episodes on the podcast, today allows you the opportunity to hear a new interview. I am enthusiastic and passionate about bringing you some further valuable perspectives on improving how we do our jobs in intensive care units around the world. And this year I’m hoping to branch out a bit and try some new things and some new types of guests. Mastering Intensive Care is not just about interviewing older and experienced intensivists. It’s also about hearing some of the challenges from less experienced intensivists as they traverse the early days of their careers. So in this episode you’ll hear from Sarah who is right in the middle of this phase working at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, Australia.

After graduating from The University of Melbourne, she completed training in general medicine before obtaining her fellowship of intensive care medicine. Along with critical care, she has a strong interest in education, simulation and the free open-access medical education (FOAMed) revolution. She is currently completing a Masters in Clinical Education in non-technical skills in intensive care. Sarah is a strong advocate for her peers including convening the Victorian Primary Exam Course, chairing the Trainee Committee and being the New Fellows' Representative for the College of Intensive Care Medicine here in Australia and New Zealand. She is a founding convenor of the Women in Intensive Care Medicine Network, which is dedicated to improving the gender balance in Australasian Intensive Care Medicine through advocacy, research and networking.

I really enjoyed talking with Sarah. She is eloquent, mature, humble and honest; and she has a great perspective on how we can all take action to achieve improved gender balance in intensive care. In the episode we talk about many things, including:

  • What attracted Sarah to intensive care
  • The rewards of delivering end of life conversations
  • Whether she can sustain a lifelong career in the specialty
  • How she dealt with the transition between trainee and fully fledged specialist
  • Her utilization of other colleagues to support her ever-improving experience base
  • The characteristics of the senior specialists who stood out to her
  • What habits she is concentrating on to develop professionally
  • How she has learnt and developed her communication skills
  • Her excellent approach to a family conversation
  • Dealing with the demands of an intensive care career
  • Preparing at home for a busy clinical week
  • Blending family and career
  • The main gender-related issues women face in intensive care
  • Sarah’s work with the Women In Intensive Care network
  • Her advice for current trainees

My genuine hope with this podcast is to inspire and empower you to bring your best self to work and to adopt improved habits and behaviours at work, so you can more masterfully interact with and care for your patients, their families and your colleagues. Thanks for joining me on a quest to improve outcomes both in your intensive care and in mine. Please help me to spread the message by simply emailing your colleagues, posting on social media or rating and reviewing the podcast.

Feel free to leave a comment or a question on the LITFL episode page, on twitter using #masteringintensivecare, on the Facebook “mastering intensive care” page or by sending me an email at andrew@masteringintensivecare.com.

Thanks for listening on the journey towards mastering intensive care.

Andrew Davies

Show notes (people, organisations, resources or links mentioned in the episode):

CICM: https://www.cicm.org.au/

Sarah Yong on Twitter: @drsarahyong

Women In Intensive Care Medicine Network: http://www.womenintensive.org/

Women In Intensive Care Medicine Network on Twitter: @womenintensive

Women In Intensive Care Medicine Network on Facebook: womenintensive

Mastering Intensive Care podcast: http://masteringintensivecare.libsyn.com/

Mastering Intensive Care at Life In The Fast lane: https://lifeinthefastlane.com/litfl/mastering-intensive-care/

  continue reading

89 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 212352914 series 2394519
Content provided by Andrew Davies. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Davies or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

What are the biggest challenges when beginning as a fully-fledged intensive care clinician?

How do you best use your senior colleagues when your experience bank is still small?

What can you do to help achieve gender equity in intensive care medicine?

These are some of the questions you’ll ponder as you listen to the latest Mastering Intensive Care podcast guest Dr Sarah Yong from Melbourne.

Having started off 2018 with two “Best of 2017” episodes on the podcast, today allows you the opportunity to hear a new interview. I am enthusiastic and passionate about bringing you some further valuable perspectives on improving how we do our jobs in intensive care units around the world. And this year I’m hoping to branch out a bit and try some new things and some new types of guests. Mastering Intensive Care is not just about interviewing older and experienced intensivists. It’s also about hearing some of the challenges from less experienced intensivists as they traverse the early days of their careers. So in this episode you’ll hear from Sarah who is right in the middle of this phase working at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, Australia.

After graduating from The University of Melbourne, she completed training in general medicine before obtaining her fellowship of intensive care medicine. Along with critical care, she has a strong interest in education, simulation and the free open-access medical education (FOAMed) revolution. She is currently completing a Masters in Clinical Education in non-technical skills in intensive care. Sarah is a strong advocate for her peers including convening the Victorian Primary Exam Course, chairing the Trainee Committee and being the New Fellows' Representative for the College of Intensive Care Medicine here in Australia and New Zealand. She is a founding convenor of the Women in Intensive Care Medicine Network, which is dedicated to improving the gender balance in Australasian Intensive Care Medicine through advocacy, research and networking.

I really enjoyed talking with Sarah. She is eloquent, mature, humble and honest; and she has a great perspective on how we can all take action to achieve improved gender balance in intensive care. In the episode we talk about many things, including:

  • What attracted Sarah to intensive care
  • The rewards of delivering end of life conversations
  • Whether she can sustain a lifelong career in the specialty
  • How she dealt with the transition between trainee and fully fledged specialist
  • Her utilization of other colleagues to support her ever-improving experience base
  • The characteristics of the senior specialists who stood out to her
  • What habits she is concentrating on to develop professionally
  • How she has learnt and developed her communication skills
  • Her excellent approach to a family conversation
  • Dealing with the demands of an intensive care career
  • Preparing at home for a busy clinical week
  • Blending family and career
  • The main gender-related issues women face in intensive care
  • Sarah’s work with the Women In Intensive Care network
  • Her advice for current trainees

My genuine hope with this podcast is to inspire and empower you to bring your best self to work and to adopt improved habits and behaviours at work, so you can more masterfully interact with and care for your patients, their families and your colleagues. Thanks for joining me on a quest to improve outcomes both in your intensive care and in mine. Please help me to spread the message by simply emailing your colleagues, posting on social media or rating and reviewing the podcast.

Feel free to leave a comment or a question on the LITFL episode page, on twitter using #masteringintensivecare, on the Facebook “mastering intensive care” page or by sending me an email at andrew@masteringintensivecare.com.

Thanks for listening on the journey towards mastering intensive care.

Andrew Davies

Show notes (people, organisations, resources or links mentioned in the episode):

CICM: https://www.cicm.org.au/

Sarah Yong on Twitter: @drsarahyong

Women In Intensive Care Medicine Network: http://www.womenintensive.org/

Women In Intensive Care Medicine Network on Twitter: @womenintensive

Women In Intensive Care Medicine Network on Facebook: womenintensive

Mastering Intensive Care podcast: http://masteringintensivecare.libsyn.com/

Mastering Intensive Care at Life In The Fast lane: https://lifeinthefastlane.com/litfl/mastering-intensive-care/

  continue reading

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