[Disclaimer: this post is written as a nurse and if there are any unfamiliar terms or you have any questions, just let me know!]
A friend and I were talking not long ago about skills we
appreciate in other nurses. One of the
most important things in the ER is being able to ascertain “sick” and “not
sick.” Granted, this is not super objective
nor easily measurable, but some nurses I trust to know just by a cursory glance
which patient needs to see the doctor…like nowish. :P
The patient admitted yesterday was sick. Several noted it. Her x-ray showed bilateral pneumonia, her lungs
sounded junky. We started her on IV
antibiotics, breathing treatments, etc, but today she was satting 65-70% on
room air, 80% with 5LPM BNC, barely 90% with a non-rebreather. Febrile, tachy, and breathing 62 times a
minute. I asked the doc to come and he
looked at me and said, “I think she needs critical care. Would you be able to take her to the
government hospital ER in the ambulance?”
Would I?! Yeah
baby I would! *grin* I was so pumped to
be able to play paramedic, see the local ED, and, oh yeah, get the patient the
care she needed. ;)
I asked the doc if he had called ahead for admitting and he
chuckled. “Oh no, if you let them know then they never accept. Just show up.” He did, however, know that the ED had opened
back up following a fire a couple days ago (longer story, things are okay now,
will share that later :P).
The ambulance is basically a van with a stretcher and oxygen
(hey, if you have to have a couple things, those are good ones ;). I took David, a new RN grad, with me on this
jaunt, but he rode in the front with the ambulance driver because it would be
inappropriate for guys to be in the back with the difficulty breathing female patient,
of course. :P But it was really great to
have him along because not only is it nice having a couple medical people when
you have a sick patient in an ambulance, but he’s also fluent in Arabic!
I’m also not being derogatory when I use the term
ambulance driver. The guy knew how to turn the siren on, but was NOT a paramedic,
EMT, or medical at all, just drives hospital staff to and from town with a bus
and drives the ambulance as needed. :P
I strapped the 39-year-old fast breathing lady onto the
stretcher, connected her to the portable oxygen, and found a place to nestle
the IV bag (thinking of my Southern Hills and paramedic friends the whole time!). It was a relatively uneventful drive there,
praise God, as I could jack the portable O2 flow higher than her bedside O2 so
we were at a WHOPPING 92% (even though she was still gasping quickly with every
inhalation).
We pulled up to the hospital and I told David to get a wheelchair
and oxygen (ours weighed like 80 pounds). He was informed that there were no
wheelchairs, but we could get a stretcher.
They rolled a stretcher out with – I kid you not - fresh blood splattered
it. I was like, okay, I’m not putting my
lady on somebody else’s blood. So we
figured out how to unleash the cot from the ambulance and took her in.
Cots sectioned off by drapes lined the ER wall. I, of course, glanced in each open one to 1)
see what kinds of patients they had and 2) look for the bleeding person. There were a bunch of police in one area with
a patient I couldn’t see Maybe that was
the bloody one. Who knows.
What I do know was that all of a sudden not only was I the one checking everything out, but everyone was staring at me. Whether it was because I wasn’t wearing a
head covering (I normally do in town but not at the hospital), or was the only
fair-skinned on there, or because I had on awesome teal scrub pants, I’m not
sure, but I was definitely cognizant that it was one of those “all eyes on the foreigner”
moments. :P
We put our patient in a bay and asked if they had a
non-rebreather mask so we could take ours back.
The closest they came was a regular face mask. Heading out to the nurses’ station, we gave
report to the doctor who appeared to be about 23-years-old. She said it was her first year there and was
very impressed with the report (“Such a good history!”), so I thank all my
paramedic friends who have been examples to me these years on that.
The day got even better when we realized we missed the lunchtime
window at the hospital and stopped for shawarma on the way home and then an
hour later my Yemeni patients cooked for me. *grin*
So please pray for S*, this woman with pneumonia that
appears to be going into ARDS, that God would heal her and receive all glory
for it!
I love you all!
Cara :)
Titus 3:3-7
4 comments:
Hi, Miss Cara!Picture No.1, and picture No.4 was both Great! The Beautiful Nurse, both INSIDE and OUT! BLESSINGS!!
So is "junky" a medical term?
You better believe it, Mr. Awesome. ;)
Never a dull moment. You go girl!
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