 Here are the toughest parts about being a hospice, and no one told me about it. Number one, no one knows or cares that you're busy and you still will get an admission. As a hospice, when I come to work, I have a panel of patients I'm familiar with, also patients who came overnight, and some of them likely will get sick and severely sick. And even though I'll be busy managing and trying to put out fires, I may get a call from the emergency room saying, hey, by the way, you also need to see this sick person downstairs, ASAP. Number two, when you have patients that are very familiar with the medical system, maybe because they've unfortunately been sick for so long, they start to kind of request specific things, either specific pain medications, specific regimens of meds, or medications not to be given in a specific way. And then finally, number three, there are days where you just actually feel bored. As a hospice, while you are taking active care of patients, there are going to be a large part of your list that is going to be managed by a lot of specialists, maybe infectious disease, maybe the ICU, maybe cardiology, you're waiting for those teams to give their recommendations, and those are kind of the main things until you're ready to discharge them. Now, if you want all the insights of my full time as being a physician, especially the good parts, make sure you hit that follow and subscribe for more content just like this one.