Dedicated to the emergency of the McLaren Thumb region

Dr Michael Remley DO served at Upper Thumb for thirteen years in the McLaren Thumb Region Emergency Department and has now taken on the role of Head of the Emergency Department for McLaren Thumba and McLaren Caro.

Having worked in emergency medicine in the thumb region for thirteen years, Dr. Michael Remley D. O. sees patients through McLaren’s thumb Region Emergency Department.

“I am the head of the emergency branch of the Mclaren Thumb region and I recently became the head of the McLaren Caro region, so I will be the manager of any of the branches,” Remley said. “This (month) marks the beginning of my thirteenth year at McLaren Thumb. The organization I work for has been under contract there since 2002. “

The organization he refers to is American Physician Partners, which began hiring through Huron Medical Center before installing McLaren Thumb Region.

Before he and his wife lived and worked at Thumb, Remley, who was born and raised in Pennsylvania, finished his studies at the University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine. After studying at Pontiac, he moved to Vassar and worked for McLaren Thumb. Region (although at that time it was still the Huron Medical Center) since then. He said he has enjoyed living in the domain ever since.

“I’m more of a person, so I like the rural character of this one. I’m not a fan of ‘big cities,’ so I like that,” Remley said. “I love the other people I paint with and the other people I serve, which is also very helpful. It’s an exclusive delight to paint in a rural area rather than a big city or even in urban areas, where I’ve (painted) at once, so I’ve enjoyed being (on the road) with everyone and running around with the network paintings and it’s become a component of my home. “

Over the years, Remley has evolved into many other roles within McLaren Thumb Region while he was attacked and out of the emergency department.

“I’m a board member and former chief of staff,” Remley said. “The hospital is definitely something I’m committed to and I need to make sure we provide the proper emergency care outside of the emergency department. “the role of director (whether at McLaren Thumb and Caro), it’s much less difficult to make sure that we’re delivering the quality of care that I need to provide to the network and that my organisation needs to deliver to the network. “

Remley talked about this determination and how he handles jobs in a busy environment. The emergency branch has 24-hour shifts and the speed upgrade helps keep him and the rest of the branch on guard. It is this update of the speed of the works. which Remley appreciates.

“It’s like the excitement and excitement of the emergency department, you never know what’s going to come through the door,” Remley said. “You can know who’s having a central seizure or who’s having trouble breathing or you can have a toothache or a sore throat, or you can have a serious twist of automotive fate or, where we are, a serious turn of agricultural fate. You have anything and there is no set schedule for that, some days you don’t have as much and some days you have other people in the waiting rooms because there are many other people asking for an emergency car at that time. Interesting. “

It was this substitution and being in a rural domain that encouraged Remley to live and paint here. For him, this mixture is the most productive way to meet netpainters and patients.

“Being in a rural area, you have the challenge of being the only doctor or having only a few resources that you would have (more) in a big city,” Remley said. “You have to think differently, you have to act differently and treat patients a little differently. Not in the medical care you give them, but in the way you monitor and monitor them because you have to move them for an hour or an hour and a half, especially the COVID crisis. “

However, being in this little netpainting makes it less difficult for her to relate to her patients. Despite some of the demanding regional situations (although less difficult to manage thanks to collaborations with other McLaren hospitals), netpainting is close enough to where you can paint closer to your patients than if you were in a big city.

“The biggest thrill is when you have a patient who is in very poor health and you have to turn them around and stabilize them and then hear that they’ll come back to the network paintings later,” Remley said. “That’s one of the unique things about the thumb is that I’ve learned that everyone (here) is connected. Any patient I care for, through some kind of relationship, whether it’s fifth or tenth grade, is connected to my colleagues and the other people I picture with, so I know I’m caring for members of the circle of family. In emergency medicine, you don’t have that follow-up that you have in other specialties where you see the patient coming back to you. “

For Dr. Remley, McLaren Thumb and McLaren Caro are the places to work and live a lifetime. For him, it’s about serving the network and loving the place where you work and live.

“I love the outdoors and I love hunting and fishing, and having the lake around is great (it’s the ocean I’m used to on the East Coast, but I love that aspect),” Remley said. And knowing the other providers in the domain makes running in combination much more enjoyable, as we like to work as a family.

“Like I said, I know that a lot of times when I’m with a patient, it’s a family member in the hospital or they know them by marriage or other things, you feel much more concerned about the care you give them. to other people, and it makes you need to provide them with the most productive care you can because you know it’s going to other people you know and you know you know. Be confident. “

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