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Maybe the boring is finished August 30, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Business, asinine, hospital, my life, work.
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Maybe the boring is finished now that week one of orientation is finally over, although hope is often a cruel mistress. Today was the most mind-numbing experience of my entire life. I’m considering downing half a bottle of whiskey just to put my poor brain cells out of their misery; after all, is it not written that “I’d rather have a bottle in front of me than have to have a frontal lobotomy?”

I was in the hospital at 6:25. This is no small feat for me as I have been working nights for years and my brain’s inclination is to be grinding to a halt at that time. Regardless, I was there at 6:25. My trainer and I did something which I absolutely can not remember, and then we got breakfast.

Instead of the clinically oriented things I was hoping for, it was still more corporate compliance and HIPAA. At this point I know more than I ever cared to about billing regulations, fraud, and privacy. Indeed, should anybody come up to me and demand to know the private information of a patient so that they can go double-bill with a slightly altered DRG and defraud the government to gain funds with which they will sell the aforementioned private information to corrupt narcotics smugglers from Colombia, I know that my first actions should be to immediately notify the corporate compliance officer and hire a good attorney to guide me through the thousands of hours of depositions that will surely follow.

The end of the day was a little better. I did get to begin some of the clinical education, like an ABG test and some pharmacology review. The orientation to Respiratory Therapy here promises to be a lengthy process. I filled out all the P&P papers today, and some of the clinical ones, but I still have an entire three-ring binder chock full of papers to complete in addition to the employee manual (several hundred pages) and the folder full of general info to examine. I’ll take a picture and post it later…it’s quite the stack of paper.

Hopefully I can resume the usual madness here soon. Stay tuned. Until the madness resumes, why not go check out the works of Skywriter? Her writing is really excellent and always makes you think a bit. This post in regards to the unexplained and the mysterious that we often ponder left me mellowed and thinking, and that is a good way to be. I’ll leave you with her words:

I think of Shakespeare’s immortal words: We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep. Whether our dreams are that of order and truth and logic, or the unbidden and unexplained, I can’t help but ponder how utterly insignificant we human beings truly are in the unknown inter-workings of our world. Suddenly, I feel strangely small, and ever so alone.

Videos August 29, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Uncategorized.
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“Welcome to Sunny Flats Medical Center…we’re glad you’re here. My name is Roger the Respiratory Educator, and I’ll be handling your orientation. Unfortunately for you, you need to watch all of these hospital videos about RT policies and safety procedures in order to be allowed to do anything even remotely clinical, so here’s your remote control and here’s the hospital’s on-demand orientation video system.

Good luck staying awake.”

This was my orientation today. After finishing the clinical core, things like restraint and CPR checkoffs, I was sent to the RT educator, who will surely be an excellent resource but who had no choice but to show me four hours of videos like “Why MRSA is all your fault” and “Why everyone who coughs has TB.”

Tomorrow, hopefully, will wrap up the boring-ass P&P stuff. Wish me luck.

Wow August 28, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Uncategorized.
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Too tired to write much owing to a trip to the gym and a long day, but a quick tale:

I am the only RT in orientation, a surprise with a 100-plus person department. Despite me being the only lowly RT there, the Vice President of the division that handles respiratory care came down to talk to me face-to-face. Other VPs were there talking with the other hires. This is impressive because in several years at Our Lady, I saw the VP exactly once, and even then he glared at and ignored me.

If I pinch myself, I’m afraid I’ll wake up.

Tomorrow is the beginning of RT-oriented orientation with the education guy. I’m excited…I’ll tell you about it then!

Orientation: Day One August 27, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Uncategorized.
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Today was the first day of hospital orientation at Sunny Flats Medical Center. This was the boring day when all the administrators, risk managers, security people, and other assorted non-clinicians come to speak with us all.

Not all was lost. There was free breakfast and free lunch, and the hospital seems much more concerned about keeping their employees happy than anywhere else I’ve worked, which I will choose to interpret as a good sign.

It’s also very large, while Our lady was very small. Picture a yurt in the Mongolian wastelands: that is Our Lady. Now, picture the palace at Versailles. That is SFMC. Life is good.

August 26, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in links, my life, nurses.
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Jeepgirl over at Thoughts from the Night Shift tells the tale of a rarity in the modern medical madhouse: a calm, peaceful death, attended by caring family members who respected the desires of their loved ones.

If only they were all so nice.

On an unrelated note, Sunny Flats sure is a nice area. It’s skin-bubblingly hot outside right now, but I’ve checked out the local and state parks and rec websites and it looks like there’s at least five nice parks here in the city and about 25 state parks within 100 miles.  The local area has all sorts of neat stores and restaurants that were sorely lacking in the great North Woods, and I suspect that the plethora of parks and recreation and commerce will keep me sufficiently amused that I won’t notice the permafrost melting off of me.

Finally… August 26, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Uncategorized.
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I finally made it to Sunny Flats. It was a long drive down the seaboard. Let me just tell you, booking your hotels 12 hours apart because “how often do you need to stop anyway” is a really bad idea, especially when traveling with animals and/or other people. Also, Pennsylvania goes on forever and is apparently inhabited entirely by truck drivers.

On the whole the trip was good. Saw some nice scenery, drove like I’ve never driven before, and didn’t experience a single legal or mechanical malfunction throughout the entire thing!

Orientation at Sunny Flats Medical Center begins on Monday. RC orientation begins later this week or possibly next week, I’m not sure what exactly the orientation guy said because I was tired when I talked to him on the phone and sometimes I find myself not listening at all to what other people say, although I can nod and make insightful “hm” noises well enough to fool some people. It’s a useful skill to have.

Anyhow, I’m babbling now. I need some sleep. I’ll be back.

What I am about to say… August 22, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Uncategorized.
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What I am about to say is tasteless, insensitive, and not at all PC.

CNN has an article entitled “Death and Dying: when is it time to let go?” The article discusses the difficulties of end-of-life decision making and the way that modern technology has helped the decisions become much more complex.

But as much as people will argue it, I still think that just because we can keep a hunk of meat alive doesn’t mean that we should do it. And really, a significant number of patients have ceased to be whatever it is that they were before their illnesses. Their brains are gone, their souls have departed, and what remains is an empty shell: a big slab of meat.

And frankly, it’s time-consuming and pointless to keep meat alive just because we can. Believe me, I feel bad for grieving family members, and I feel bad for people whose lives have been cut short or tragically altered by the cruel machinations of an uncaring world, but sometimes the kindest thing we can do for someone is to just let them die. Keeping people alive is sometimes the unkindest cut of all.

And nobody ever seems to be willing to say it.

The continuing absence of content August 19, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Medical Blogs, links.
4 comments

I apologize for the continuing lack of content, dear readers. With any luck it will be over within two weeks.

Meantime, there’s an interesting post about tracheostomy over at Counting Sheep.

Finished August 18, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Uncategorized.
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My term at Our Lady is finished. Next week I’ll be orienting at Sunny Flats, and this week…I’ll be experiencing the thrills of packing. After the joyous thrills of packing I get to experience the unique lifestyle of the trucker as I drive across the nation to my new job. Sure, I could fly or take a train, but I’ve always wanted to take a cross-country trip.

If I get any good stories or pics, or if I remember any intriguing anecdotes for you, I’ll put ‘em up.

Can’t find his way home August 16, 2007

Posted by keepbreathing in Coming to an ER near you, Emergency Room, hospital, respiratory therapy, student.
4 comments

As I mentioned in an earlier post, sometimes music can be very evocative for one reason or another. Sometimes, songs remind you of things, trigger a memory or a thought in the same way that a distinctive smell can.

Tonight, I was listening to music as I packed my bags, readying for the upcoming trip, and my iTunes selected the only song by Blind Faith that’s ever been even remotely popular, Can’t find my way home. It reminded me of a patient I saw once, a long time ago, back when I was a newbie in the field–shortly before I graduated RT school, as it happens. This is the story.

—–

It was a beautiful spring morning in early May. The cool spring air and the refreshing warm breeze were a lovely change from the long cold snows of winter, and as I sat in the RT office at County Medical Hospital and listened to report I felt a thrill in the air. CMH was the only trauma center for miles around, and in this rural area something exciting was sure to happen. I had a full three days of clinical time at CMH, and so my studential self was in quite a tizzy at all the excitement sure to come.

The time was six fifty-five in the morning. My proctor and I were sitting in the office and drinking coffee, looking at her assigned treatments and plotting our day, when the ER pager in her pocket went off. Before she could look at the screen, the overhead pager went off. “Code 55, Code 55.”

“What is that?” I asked her.

“Trauma in the ER,” she said as she scooted her chair back and stood. “This early in the morning, must be an accident…some guy in a hurry to get to work, or something.” We downed the remainder of our coffees and walked downstairs to the ER, where the trauma team was assembled.

“Oh good, respiratory’s here. We’ll need you. He’s intubated.”  Part of me was filled with that perverse excitement that students get at the misfortune of others as I assumed a position at the head of the bed. My proctor spoke.

“What else do we know about him?”  The recording nurse examined her notes and spoke.

“He was found by a morning commuter who saw his truck off the road. Backwoods EMS was called to assist Rural Rescue with this guy. They tell us that there were long skidmarks on the road, and the patient egressed the vehicle via windshield.  Rural Fire had to come and cut him out of a tree some fifty feet in front of the truck.” The sound of sirens cutting out filled the air, and moments later we could hear the medics coming.

I remember the patient’s entrance vividly. A paramedic backed into the room, and I could see him bagging a bulky fortyish man. His head was split open on the top, and he was covered in old caked-on blood. His ET tube went through his shattered lips and his jaw looked askew. When the medics bagged him, I could see paradoxical chest rise and the dents caused by rows of symmetrical broken ribs. He had an open fracture on one of his arms; his pelvis, reported the EMTs, was moving a bit too much for comfort. But the crowning glory came at the feet of the patient. A rural rescue volunteer was clutching an enormous log that was jutting out of the mans thigh. It had gone through his lower leg and impaled the meat of his thigh, and since “you can’t take it out if you didn’t put it in” is a general rule of Field Medicine the medics had simply cut the branch off the tree and brought it in.

The trauma team burst into action, and my pathetic little student mind blanked out for a while. I remember bagging him through x-rays, setting up his transport vent, walking with the stretcher to the OR.  I remember seeing his x-rays: apparently when he hit the tree he hit it sternum-first and fractured something like four ribs on either side of his chest. Lab results came back eventually and showed him to have a BAC of somewhere in the “dead” range.

My day went on at CMH uneventfully after that. A few nebulizers, some blood gases, some chest PT. Around three in the afternoon the patient was transported to ICU, barely this side of life but less unstable than before. I went home at seven and prepared to return the next day.

The following morning, I was rotated into the ICU. Accident Guy was still in there, chock full of chest tubes and head drains and all kinds of weird things. His head was bolted to a Halo, the neuro drains monitored his ICP and the chest tubes bubbled away beneath him. My proctor and I worked with him on and off throughout the day, but just after lunch the trauma team needed to bring him back to the OR because he was having some sort of abdominal crisis. Once more I walked his stretcher to the ICU, unsure what to make of this guy. He was young for a dying man, only in his early forties. He had a job and was successful enough to afford a new truck to be launched out of at high velocity. And yet, he had been out drinking enough to raise his BAC into the 300 vicinity.  Why, I wondered, would he throw his life away like this?  I would have mused more but there was work to do, and once more I went home puzzled by the life and times of Accident Guy.

I arrived early the next morning, walking through the hospital doors at 6:15 just in time to hear a Code Blue being called in the ICU. I realized with a jump in my belly that it was accident guy. I sped up to the RT lounge and dropped my things in a pile before running into his room to watch. The trauma surgeon was at the head of the bed with an RT, shouting instructions around the room as shocks were given and his already beaten chest was compressed. Time passed by quickly, and after a full forty minutes of the best medicine we could throw at him, accident guy finally died, slipping violently from this world in a way we’d all hoped he wouldn’t.

I stayed in the room as everyone filtered out. It wasn’t my first exposure to death, but it was still more puzzling to me than most. I sighed and crossed my arms, staring at the empty body on the bed and wondering.  A grouchy nurse growled at me. “The asshole deserved it, kid. He was driving wasted. He was a philanderin’ bum. Don’t waste your pity.” Shocked at her callousness, I turned to stalk out of the room, and then– I saw it.

The most heartbreaking thing I have ever seen in my life.

A drawing, carefully made with crayons, depicting a happy family on a sunny day in a field. A big yellow sun shone from one corner and the stickmen had happy smiles plastered on their faces. Across the front of the card, scribbled in blue crayola, was the legend Get better soon daddy! I love you!

There is nothing more heartbreaking than the crushed optimism of a young child. I have never been able to forget that card and I probably never will.

Come down off your throne
And leave your body alone
Somebody must change
You are the reason
I’ve been waiting so long
Somebody holds the key
Well, I’m near the end and I just ain’t got the time
Well, I’m wasted and I can’t find my way home

Come down on your own
And leave your money at home
Somebody must change
You are the reason
I’ve been waiting all these years
Somebody holds the key
I’m near the end, and I just ain’t got the time
Oh, and I’m wasted, and I can’t find my way home

But I can’t find my way home
But I can’t find my way home
But I can’t find my way home
But I can’t find my way home
Still, I can’t find my way home
And, I ain’t done nothing wrong
But, I can’t find my way home