Sometimes I catch myself unreasonably annoyed or frustrated
with a patient. At the end of three 12
hour shifts, it often doesn’t take much on the side of the patient to make my
inner eyebrow rise up in annoyed incredulity.
Mmhmm I say, so it seems that you have had a fever and have ben vomiting
since an onset of 1 hour ago. I
see. Welcome. Welcome.
See what I mean about the unnecessary snark? Check yo’self.
I try hard with every single patient to guard against my own
judgments and knee jerk instinctions towards them or their situations, whether
those are negative or positive. I do my
best to approach each new situation with an unbiased clean slate, to listen with
my full attention to discern what is actually going on, and to put aside myself
to focus on the situation at hand. I
know that interjecting my own bias just colors my thinking in a way that is not
productive. I know enough to know that I am not yet smart
enough to rise mentally above the frustrations and see a situation for what it
actually is, be that a sick “well-patient” or a surgical abdomen, especially if
the patient is yelling in my face or insulting me throughout the encounter. It’s hard sometimes to know what skills will
come with time, and what skills I want to make sure to keep at bay with
time. Delicate balances.
There are days that I seem to be swimming in a sea of
mundane repetition, and days where I feel so incredibly unprepared for the real
world. I work with colleagues who have
patience with me and demonstrate proper techniques, ask me questions constantly
and push me to think as an independent provider. And I work with others who start the day by
telling me how much they hate working
with students, how I will make their shift seem cumbersome and unwieldy. It’s this weird winding path that can change
with each shift. I sometimes get pushed
to the side, or cut off, or ignored entirely, and other times I am functioning
as part of the team, writing scripts, putting in orders, being heard. I try to remember that each separate experience
is combining together to create a whole picture, and that picture is what I am bringing
forward with me. In addition to the
medicine, I am learning about work relationships, and collaboration,
cooperation, communication. All those
poster board buzz words. Metaphorical trust
falls and all that jazz.
In general though, especially when I am feeling stretched my
most thin, I invariably have a patient who pulls the ground back under my
feet. Last week that patient was a man
with Parkinson’s who was in the ER for an evaluation of his pinky finger after
a recent fall. He was my last patient of
my last shift. Ability to express
compassion was waning.
Sitting lopsided on his hospital stretcher with his cane
propped across his lap and held loosely by tremulous hands, suspenders pulled
taut across his angled shoulders, he slowly raised his head to greet me as I
bustled into the room. As with most
times in the ER, outside his glass door I could hear IV pumps going off with
intermittent high pitches beeps, the intercom blaring in reports from the
incoming ambulance crew, people laughing at the nurses station, and the mammoth
xray machine lumbering noisily down the hallway. It’s easy to let distraction sink in. I
forced myself to bring my attention forward as I pulled my chair bedside.
He was a slow talker, preferring to take his time to
correctly answer my questions after proper thought. His body lists to the right now, often
precariously, and falling often is nothing new for him. He used to be a high school math teacher. Now he writes poetry. He fell on his right pinky this morning, and
now it’s stuck in an abnormal position.
It doesn’t really hurt too much, but he can’t move it, and that’s
cramping his style. His teenage son
dropped him off and his wife will come to pick him up when he is done.
His xrays showed a dislocation, but luckily no acute
fracture. I was happy because I’ve never
reduced a dislocation, and fractures are consulted out to orthopedics. Plus, I could use the practice performing
nerve blocks.
I’m working with a doc who does things Just. So. His precise preferred methodology is often
just a hair off from how my novice hands clumsily perform them, and I know that
it drives him crazy. He blocked the
lateral portion of the finger and I the medial. Below the finger we injected were a pile of
the patient’s poems. He likes to carry
them with him. He’s self-published and
working on book number two. While we
waited for the anesthetic to kick in, he handed us each one poem to read. We read them at the doctors station. I don’t like poetry, and I was a little
nervous that I would do more harm than good when I yank that finger forward an
back into it’s fitting place.
I applied traction and pressure and the joint popped back into
place with a palpable and audible snap.
My doc says you did good, but doing it this way would have been
better.
As I slowly taped his fingers together, we discovered that
we are both from Minnesota. It’s always
an unexpectedly nice surprise when I meet people from my home. A little piece of Minnesota nice is never a
bad thing to encounter at the end of a busy day.
He gave me two of his poems to bring home after my long shift.
One to make me laugh and one that’s more somber. I told him we would forever share a bond because
his finger was my first dislocation reduction.
He laughed and said I handled it like a pro, he would never have
guessed.
I stepped out of his room and back into the chaotic hallway,
and I realized that I felt better again. Grounded.
1 comment:
Thanks for this sweet story. I think we need grace to help us keep our head in the game with every patient that comes our way. I am in awe at how much you're learning!
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