Earlier this year, nurse Deb Louden and I had an e-mail conversation. She was wondering if anyone ever read her blog and if it was even worth her time to write it. Read this story and know without a doubt the answer I gave her! Taken from Deb's blog, "Deb's Heart in Africa":
I walked into the ward last night with my mind prepared for
hearing the breathing struggles of a small boy my screening friends had told me about days earlier.
On Patient Selection Day there had been an EMT call
to the pre-screeners at the very front of the line, for a small boy who had an
airway obstruction. He had by-passed registration and histories, where I was
stationed, but I heard about it through the radio conversations. I also heard
later that he’d been scheduled for surgery in the first week of the hospital being
opened.
Yesterday when I walked into the ward, he was sitting in bed
1. When my ears heard the struggle of air passing through his airway, my eyes saw the
retractions of his muscles, the tension in his neck, the waving of his hands as
he struggled to gasp in the air that his body so desperately needed, my heart
lurched and I swallowed back the lump in my throat and blinked back the tears
that threatened to roll down my face. At that moment, although he was acutely distressed,
he’d been in this position for four months, there was nothing I could immediately do to relieve his stress.
When he was awake it was
only for small periods of time
because his body was so exhausted from the struggle to get oxygen. When
he fell asleep it was only for seconds because he would stop breathing
and his body would wake him up
to breathe. Over and over and over again, he’d wake up, fling his arms
around
in frustration and flop back into a restless, teasing sleep.
Today he got his surgery. As I was preparing to head to work
I could hardly wait to hear how it had gone. I bumped into his surgeon in the
hallway, who quickly filled me in. The tumour was out, he didn’t need a
tracheostomy and he’d been extubated about 20 minutes ago.
He stayed in the recovery
room for some hours as they woke
him up slowly preparing for worst case scenario. He recovered well and
so they brought him around to the ward, to the nurse in my team. Once he
was
settled in his bed, we monitored everything very closely, rejoicing in
the
sound of his much quieter breathing.
The doctors popped in and out, backing us up by being close by
if we were concerned about anything. As time passed by, his oxygen saturation
dropped lower and repositioning him didn’t help. His heart rate and respiratory
rate increased and so we called the team back for help.
After discussion between doctors and with the mama, they
took him back to the OR to intubate him and sedate him for a couple of days to let his body rest.
An hour later he arrived back from the OR. We settled him
into the new intensive care bed, on the ventilator, letting his body catch up
on the last four months of missed sleep. His little body lay there, the machine
doing the work of breathing for him, his chest moving up and down, muscles completely relaxed, so peaceful and comfortable.
In the following days he will come off the ventilator and we
will see him breathe on his own, healthy and strong. I can’t wait to see him
walk and play and smile.
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