Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 5 | Page 14

REVIEW WEEKENDS AT BELLEVUE Nine Years on the Night Shift at the Psych ER By Julie Holland, MD © 2010 Bantam Books Reviewed by M. Saleem Seyal, MD, FACC, FACP W eekends at Bellevue is a gripping tale of Dr. Julie Holland’s memoir about her medical education and residency training, but primarily as an attending psychiatrist working at the iconic Bellevue Hospital in New York for the weekend night shift for nine years. Reading through this book is a wild, fast-paced romp with high-spirited and honest prose with no-holds-barred pronounce- ments. She very candidly describes her encounters with a multitude of patients with various and sundry issues in the Psych ER. She took extensive notes of her recollection of verbatim conversations with patients “to exorcise the demons,” when she got home on Monday mornings after two crazy days at work. In the first chapter of the book, a patient encounter starts with a bang when a manic patient, Joshua, is brought in by police. The story is narrated with precise detail. Joshua is found completely naked in Times Square, parading, growling and barking. In the detainable area of the Psych ER, Joshua is “hyper-verbal, spewing non-sequi- turs” and talking about grandiose religiosity. Getting any coherent history in this psychotic-manic phase with rambling thoughts and a flight of ideas is decidedly difficult. After much discussion and listening to his being a “holy man,” his pronouncements and his 12 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE supposed miracles, and to his considerable chagrin, she has to break the ultimate news to him that he needs to be admitted in the psych ward involuntarily. She continues with many other patients all with different kinds of mental and emotional issues. There are moments of tenderness, compassion, toughness and humor throughout these remarkable tales. There are instances of macho swagger but also regrets and shame about being tough and harsh to patients. Dr. Holland did her pre-med courses at Penn Med in the late 1980s and psychiatry residency at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City; after that she ended up at Bellevue Hospital. She loved the experience, was “enthralled by insanity” and delighted in taking care of the patient population who showed up there because she wanted to “play with fire, to swim in the deep end.” Bellevue located in Manhattan, New York, is the oldest hospital in the United States, and opened as a six-bed infirmary in 1736 with an unalterable and continuous tradition of “serving the underserved,” similar to Cook County Hospital in Chicago, old General Hospital in Louisville and many other institutions scattered across US cities. Bellevue was used as an almshouse, a penal institution, and subsequently an asylum for the insane was added in 1878. Bellevue hospital has been a full-service hospital that holds the honor of having the first ambulance service, maternity ward, emergency room and pediatric