Autonomy Pt 4
By Parson Thru
- 3172 reads
“Morning John.”
John looked up from where he’d been trying to wipe blood from his fingers.
“What are you doing?”
“My head’s bleeding.”
“Let me look.”
The bandage on the left side of his head had come loose. One of the scabs had come away and blood was oozing from under the dressing.
“There was blood on my pillow this morning.”
“Ok. I’m just going to take this off.”
“Ana?”
“Yes?”
“You are Ana, then?”
“Yes.”
“And Cheryl?”
“Nearly. Shelley.”
“Ah! Shelley! - Ouch!”
“I’m sorry. One of the scabs was stuck.”
Ana inspected the sutures and the abraded areas of John’s scalp.
“It looks healthy, but I’ll clean it up. The hair needs shaving away again.”
John sat propped-up in the bed, almost as though he’d lost interest in the condition of his scalp.
“You know, I’ve no idea whether it’s night or day. I suppose it must be day if the cleaners are working.”
“Yes. It’s Wednesday. Wednesday morning. I have to take the other dressings down today, John. Just to have a look and change them. Then you’re booked in for a scan and the physio’s coming to see you.”
“Are the police coming today?”
“I don’t know.”
“They’ve been once. I told them it wasn’t an accident. I can’t remember much else. Do you think they’ll come back?”
“I’m sorry, John. I really don’t know. It was my day off yesterday. Nobody said anything in handover.”
“Can you find out?”
“Ok. I need to get someone to help me turn you.”
“Where’s Shelley?”
“She’s not in today. We’re a bit short-staffed. Let me get someone to help with this and we’ll have a chat.”
“Why are they doing a scan?”
“Just a moment, John. I’ll ask the doctor to explain when he does his rounds.”
Ana disappeared out of sight. John stared after her. He remembered that he’d told the policemen he was a journalist and began to wonder if he’d told them too much already. He couldn’t remember clearly what he’d said. His breathing seemed hard. He could feel his heart racing. He recognised the symptoms of a panic attack.
“This is Sam, John. He’s going to help me roll you and take your dressings down.”
“Hi John. How are you today?”
John let out an enormous sigh.
“Are you feeling ok?” Sam asked.
He looked at the monitors beside the bed. “Heart-rate’s a little high. BP up slightly. Oxygen fine.”
“I was having a little panic.”
Ana picked up his hand.
“You feel a bit clammy. What’s the matter? Is it your head?”
“They tried to kill me.”
“Who?” Ana asked. “The police?”
Sam looked across at her.
“No.” John felt exasperated. He had no patience with anything.
“That's what I told the police. That it wasn't an accident. They were trying to kill me.” He looked at Ana. “Oh, Jesus, when did they come? I’ve got no idea.”
Sam answered. “The police were here yesterday. They came to ask about your accident, that’s all. They always speak to injured parties in RTAs and assaults. It’s nothing to worry about.”
John stared back at him.
“You were knocked unconscious. You have a head injury. Let me see.” Sam looked carefully at the side of John’s head. “What happened?”
“The dressing came loose.” Ana answered. We need to shave the hair back again.”
Sam nodded. “Uhuh. That’s why they want another scan, John. You’re under the neurosurgeon as well as Orthopaedics.”
John nodded. Are you a doctor?
“No.” Sam laughed. “Just a nurse. The doctors placed you in an induced coma when you were admitted. The side-effects can be nasty. A lot of confusion.”
John was taking everything in.
“Don’t worry.” Sam continued. “You’re having another scan today. You’re in good hands.”
Ana drew the sheets back.
“Ok, John. Let’s get you onto your side.”
She looked at Sam.
“Ready?”
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Comments
wasn't he drinking water in a
wasn't he drinking water in a prevous part? Just wondering why he needs a canula to keep hydrated..
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no no - I just remember when
no no - I just remember when someone I know was in an induced coma, then intubated, and for mouth hydration we could only give him those sponge lollipops as the intubation was because they weren't sure he could swallow. Even when he pulled the tube out of his throat (because people get really agitated when coming out of an induced coma) - which he did frequently - they would have to xray the tube once re-inserted before they could use it - and sometimes he would go 18 hours + with no meds, liquid, food etc. it was only when i went to pals that they gave him fluids, but not with a canula - it was something else in his arm, not his hand. Once he could drink they didn't do it at all - but to get to that point he had to have loads of assessments from the physio to make sure he could swallow
I can see why you'd do it for interest. Maybe ask your expert?
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she does sound brave! PALS -
she does sound brave! PALS - patient and something liaison service - it's where you go when the hospital is trying to kill someone through incompetance. Every hospital has one
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The PALS person was really
The PALS person was really nice and she did get a result of him being hydrated with the needle thing, however by a complete and utter co-incidence, the following day the ward told me I smelt of alcohol and wasn't to visit the ward anymore (I don't drink)
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Parson, again, well written,
Parson, again, well written, insightful and sharing of it, and then insert's comments, takes me to her story LUCKY, people want to talk about their lost one's sometimes, not have them avoided as a subject out of bounds. she's an excellent, interactive writer.
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thank you both, and apologies
thank you both, and apologies for hijacking your story parson - it's just some things you don't forget - that's one of them
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