Medical Intern

Overview
A good Nurse is the oil that keeps the engine of the medbay running smoothly. You have the training and dedication to make sure all the patients coming into medbay receive proper care.

What Can You Do?
You are trained in the proper use of sleeper beds, advanced scanners, and can use their full range of treatments. You know how to set up the cryotubes and should make sure that gets done as soon as possible. You also have a grasp of the general equipment of the medical bay and possibly how to use it, including the cloning pod.

You do NOT know how to do surgery, work in virology, or make medicine in chemistry.

The main caveat with this role is that you are NOT a doctor. In a well staffed medbay, you should not be treating patients by yourself. If patients come into medbay you should call for a doctor and do what you can until a doctor or paramedic takes over. Obviously you're allowed to do what you can if you're able, but it's inappropriate to treat patients if there are other available medical staff.

Your main duties are to help the doctors do their duties and make sure they didn't oversee anything. Does the patient in the ICU have an allergy to bicardine? Did the doctor remember the patient they left in the advanced scanner? Was the scan of the patient printed and given to the surgeon? Did the surgeon remember to hook up the patient with anesthetic? Is the corpse of the recent clone put in the morgue to prevent them from seeing their own corpse? Did the doctors remember to turn on the cryotube freezer? Are the medical records up to date?

Remember, you are just as much of a valued member of the medical staff as anyone else. Don't let the doctors use their fancy degrees to belittle the grunt work you're responsible for - after all, you're the only reason they're able to get anything done around here.