Three times is the charm…I don’t think so….

I have spent the last three Friday nights in the hospital emergency room. My brother-in-law has been suffering from pressure wounds, what we lay people would call “bed sores”. Since I’m no nurse and refuse to look at the area between his “gluteal crack and scrotum”, I had no idea it was getting worse, even with care.

On the advice of his home nurse I called the ambulance. My big mistake was I didn’t immediately call 911. You can’t just call the ambulance and say, no one is going to die in the next 10 minutes, so could you come over here and transport?. No, you must call 911 and make it as urgent as possible. Okay, I was a theater major, I can make an emergency if you need me to.

The second Friday night in the ER was because, they sent him home from the hospital too soon even though I begged them to keep him. Within 2 days of his going home and having home nurses and caregivers, and inventors of creative ways to make his wheelchair a place to sit without more bed sores, he was in pain with a draining wound and starting a fever. Five days of IV antibiotics later, they sent him home again.

The very first day the visiting nurse appeared she asked me why he wasn’t sent to rehab. Hmm, good question.

That same night, the third Friday night, he started acting a little ‘off’ around dinner time and within 2 hours, I got a call that he was exhibiting bizarre behavior. This had happened once before when he had a massive infection. I gave the home caregiver the pleasure of calling 911 and using her theatrics to get an ambulance poste haste (that’s acting talk for hurry up, someone’s sick but isn’t going to die in 10 minutes).

And this is where it gets crazy.

The first half hour in the ER, he’s got two technicians on either side of him with his arms out trying like hell to get a drop of blood out of him. He looks like a crucifixion. The entire time he’s saying in a monotone: “Ow.”

Like a hundred times: “Ow.”

“Where does it hurt?” I ask him.

“Everywhere,” he says.

That exact conversation continues for the next three hours.

After two hours of “Ow”, they tell me he’s third on the list for a CT-Scan. He starts to get a little crazy now. He’s thrashing around and my Mom and I are holding down his arms because he has IV lines in his hands and we don’t want him to accidentally rip them out. He’s already been crucified once.

Then he gets louder and now he’s saying: ” I can’t” and “Oh please” and “Ow” and we try to reassure him. He is thrashing and fighting pretty wildly now.  I have asked for a pain pill and I’m just about to pull a “Terms of Endearment” Shirley MacLaine mother of all hissy fits, when the nurse comes in with the CT-Scan tech behind her. She tries to give L a pain pill, but he won’t swallow water. The CT Scan guy disappears figuring he ain’t goin’ anywhere till he calms down, and then the Nurse high tails it all around the ER looking for CT guy to get his ass back here and take L for a scan.

Somehow they successfully scan him. NOW because all tests of urgency have been done, and there is no concern that a pain killer IV will harm him, the Nurse hunts down the doctor….who we still have not seen or talked to…..and comes in with some miracle drug that knocks him right the hell out in 60 seconds flat.

It is now almost 2 A.M. We have been there for more than 3 hours. He is finally resting, calm and not in any obvious distress. We go out to the Nurses’ station to see if they have any sense to confirm that he will be admitted. I answer all their questions. One of the doctors says let’s go back to his room so I can see if I have any more questions. I’m thinking she wants some HIPPA privacy rather than discussing this in the open hallway.

My mom and I walk into his room. He is resting so comfortably that we both let out a huge sigh of relief.

What is the first thing this doctor does?

She gently goes over to his bedside, looks down at him, puts her hand on his shoulder, shakes the hell out of him, pulls his eyelids up and yells: ” L! CAN YOU HEAR ME? L! CAN YOU OPEN YOUR EYES?”

My mom and I just look at each other and go “Ow” and walk out of the room……good luck with that Dr. Nutjob.

 

You just have to Laugh………..

Cathy Sikorski

0 thoughts on “Three times is the charm…I don’t think so….

  1. You are absolutely right, sometimes you just have to laugh or else you will knock some fool in the medical field to their knees.
    I have been known to ask some moron who has no idea what they are doing and who has stuck my hubby’s veins to the point where he has tears, if they work there.
    I have also been known to refuse to let someone who has bruised him badly getting this blood not lay a hand on him and make them send in a nurse or dr.
    We no longer use the local hospital and I have the ambulance come and stabilize him and then get him in the car and go like a bat out of hell up the freeway close to the hospital in the city, pull over, call an ambulance and they transport him to the hospital in the city.
    The local ambulance service contacts to the local hospital who no longer have any cardiac wing or heart drs on staff.
    The cost of the local ambulance is paid for by the water bill taxes we pay so they do not charge us.
    I have learned to laugh but to also be a hard ass.
    Amazing what we can do when we are advocating for, and being a full time caregiver for, a loved one.

    1. I can’t believe what you do! It’s brilliant and kind of scary, isn’t it? I, too am done with the local hospital, so I may have to take your advice. Yep, in caregiving laughter and hard ass definitely go together!

  2. “Shameless” staring Bill Macy ! His character is in a hospital bed , unconscious, and not responding . His young son walks to the foot of his bed punches him in his GROIN, and he wakes up. L’s Dr.took the more CONVENTIONAL approach ??? So sorry for the three of you.. BREATH!

  3. Cathy, your wit is priceless. You have this marvelous ability to take really serious stuff that would freak most of us out – and turn it into something humorous. True, you just have to laugh. Best wishes.