Kathryn Marie Charnock, M.D., Major, MC, USAF: Graduate: Hart High School, Newhall ’99 Deployed: Afghanistan, 2013-2014 Present: Lackland AFB Parents: Paula Charnock Millar, George Charnock, M.D.
Doctor’s Diary March 30, 2018: Myron’s right to die
(Snippets from the frontline) Myron’s right to die When I first visited this mid-80s senior at home, he laid on a hospital bed paralyzed. Myron ran a successful … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 27, 2018: Bad news
(Snippets from the frontline) Bad news As a physician, giving bad news is not an easy task. In the past, the hardest thing to tell a patient was they have … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 24, 2018: Making a hospital complaint
(Snippets from the frontline) Making a hospital complaint As a primary care doctor, I am responsible for admitting patients who are ill. A plan is developed, discussion made with patient … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 21, 2018: Start a revolution
(Snippets from the frontline) Start a revolution To my colleagues: Throughout the nation, we convene at education meetings to coalesce evidence-based information improving medical care. Missing at these conferences is … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 18, 2018: Your physician “quarterback”
(Snippets from the frontline) Your physician “quarterback” When admitted to a hospital, you might be too ill to ask questions or make good medical decisions. Having a family member or … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 15, 2018: Insurance company denial is your risk
(Snippets from the frontline) Insurance company denial is your risk My patient was admitted to the ICU with a heart attack. At that time we did not have coronary angiograms … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 12, 2018: US healthcare – another inconvenient truth
(Snippets from the frontline) US healthcare – another inconvenient truth Profit: Business takeover of medicine at the expense of quality patient care. Doctors: Marginalized without a voice becoming a mere … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 9, 2018: Daylight savings preventive care
(Snippets from the frontline) Daylight savings preventive care She got on a stool to change the clock and fell, breaking her hip. From that point on “fall back in Fall” … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 6, 2018: DNA
(Snippets from the frontline) DNA DNA links your past to present weaving together multiple generations. Simple testing (spitting into a test tube) may reveal information you might never suspect. Some … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary March 3, 2018: How hospitals minimize doctor input
(Snippets from the frontline) How hospitals minimize doctor input Despite physicians being on the frontline of healthcare, doctor input in hospitals is nil. Medical decision-making is now in the hands … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 28, 2018: Symptoms
(Snippets from the frontline) Symptoms Your body talks to you. Billions of cells work in harmony allowing you to live and survive our environment. But when something goes wrong, the … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 25, 2018: Powered by Toyota
(Snippets from the frontline) Powered by Toyota Everyone wants their hospital to run like a lean machine. Efficient, safe, and providing timely quality service. Some hospitals indeed are launching a … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 22, 2018: Archimedes et al in tribute
(Snippets from the frontline) Archimedes et al in tribute He was a Greek mathematician who historians say was on the verge of developing calculus, but was deliberately killed by a … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 19, 2018: Character counts
(Snippets from the frontline) Character counts People cheat and have no scruples. I’ve seen it in business and government. Worse, I’ve seen it in my own profession with doctors. I … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 16, 2018: Learning a lesson
(Snippets from the frontline) Learning a lesson Here is the dilemma: Medicare patient has chest pain and calls 911. Ambulance transports patient to the emergency room and a diagnosis of … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 13, 2018: Paying off my medical school loan
(Snippets from the frontline) Paying off my medical school loan Yep…it’s done. It took only 37 years. Why did it take so long? Partly because of the principal, but mostly … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 10, 2018: Prescription denied
(Snippets from the frontline) Prescription denied He was an opera coach with a deep melodious voice. Now in his 80’s, my patient uses a walker and suffers from lumbar spinal … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 7, 2018: Retirement worry
(Snippets from the frontline) Retirement worry Some want to retire, while others are forced to retire. We rely on savings, social security, investments, retirement benefits, and family. In reality, you … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 4, 2018: Mike
Snippets from the frontline) Mike He was a veteran who lost both legs below his knees in Vietnam, yet returned to California, married, raised three daughters, and started a successful … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary February 1, 2018: Hospital “code words”
(Snippets from the frontline) Hospital “code words” Over the past decade, the business mentality takeover ascribed “code words” to hospitalized elder seniors, herding them out of the hospital into nursing … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary January 29, 2018: Decreasing life expectancy
(Snippets from the frontline) Decreasing life expectancy After rising 26 years, US life expectancy decreased for the second straight year. News reports attributes opioid fatalities as a contributing factor to … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary January 26, 2018: Sepsis
(Snippets from the frontline) Sepsis In hospitalized patients, experienced doctors and nurses instinctively recognize imminent death, and that awareness makes them act immediately to save a life. This instinct is … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary January 23, 2018: Elder suicide
(Snippets from the frontline) Elder suicide We’ve heard these words before: “He died peacefully in his sleep.” As a geriatric physician, I fear that an elder senior has committed suicide … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary January 20, 2018: Being au naturel
(Snippets from the frontline) Being au naturel Sometimes statistics are baffling. Why do many autoimmune diseases (fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, lupus, multiple sclerosis, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, etc.) effect significantly more women than … Continue Reading →
Doctor’s Diary January 17, 2018: Readmission
(Snippets from the frontline) Readmission If you are admitted, discharged, and return with the same diagnosis within 30 days, hospitals are penalized by Medicare for the readmission. Nowadays, hospitals are … Continue Reading →