I spent last Wednesday night in
hospital. The only time I’ve been in hospital before was in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida when I was in for 3 months following my transplant.
Here is a brief history of one of
the most interesting 36-hour periods I’ve ever had in my life:
Wednesday
|
|
2:00
am
|
I
get out of bed and have to stop to rest three times walking the 20 paces to
the bathroom because I am so breathless. I am coughing up buckets of
phlegm, I’m hot and I feel terrible.
|
10:30
am
|
Caroline
insists that I visit the doctor but I am so weak and tired that I tell her I
can’t. She phones the surgery.
|
12:30 pm
|
The doctor arrives for a HOME
VISIT!!!
My
temperature is 39.7°C, my blood pressure is 71/47 and my oxygen level is 86%.
Very quickly, I am diagnosed to be suffering from pneumonia.
|
3:00
pm
|
I
am admitted to Milton Keynes hospital and go through an hour of tests and
x-rays.
|
4:00 pm
|
I go to a ward in the MAU
(Medical Assessment Unit). All the medical wards are full. There
are 3 beds on either side of it. 4 men, two of whom are younger than me,
occupy the other beds. There is one empty bed.
1 On the far side of the ward,
to my left, is John. He looks very old and is either asleep or
unconscious.
2 Directly opposite me is Peter
(possibly 35) who is sitting up in bed, staring intently at me with both his
hands shaking on his lap.
3 To his left is a middle-aged
man reading a magazine.
4 To my right is an old man who
is lying on his back and staring at the ceiling.
The bed to my left is vacant.
|
4:45 pm
|
Peter, who has been staring at
me most of the time, speaks to me:
“Got
a cigarette?” I shake my head.
|
6:00
pm
|
John gets out of bed, shouts and starts to walk, very unsteadily, away from
it. The nurses try to get him to return but he ignores them and sits on
the bed of the Magazine Man who has been taken to X-Ray. John is shouting continuously.
|
6:30 pm
|
Magazine Man is back from X-Ray
and tells John in no uncertain terms to, “Get off my fucking bed”.
Eventually, John does that and walks towards his own bed. At the last moment though, he evades the
nurse shepherding him and goes to stand by the large open window.
As the nurse walks towards him,
John raises his fists and tells her to, “Fuck off,” or he’ll hurt her.
She
stops for a moment and then moves towards him. John swings a fist at
her but misses.
|
6:45 pm
|
Dinner is served. I just
have orange juice, as I’m not at all hungry. John refuses anything
brought to him and Peter says he’s not hungry but he wants a, “very big
vodka.”
“How am I supposed to stop my
hands shaking?” he asks the nurse.
“Get
me a drink.”
|
7:30 pm
|
I notice that John is standing
in a large puddle on the floor. Two new nurses, who have just started
their shift, try to get him to move so they can clean up. He refuses to
move and shouts,
“I’m 83. I was in the
army and fought the Germans. I’m not frightened of you two.”
The
man to my right shouts out, “To pee or not to pee?” and laughs loudly at his
joke.
|
8:00 pm
|
I try to be helpful.
“If he’s 83, he was only 15
when the war ended,” I tell the nurse, “and so he couldn’t have fought the
Germans.”
The
nurse says, “Thanks,” but rather coldly.
|
8:30 pm
|
John removes his wet pyjama
trousers and stands by the window, stark naked, shouting at the top of his
voice. The nurse hands him a urine bottle.
“It’s empty,” says John,
looking aggrieved.
The
nurse tries to explain what the bottle is for but he shouts at her and
doesn’t listen.
|
8:40
pm
|
A
Nurse brings clean, dry pyjamas for John. He must be cold standing by
the open window. He sits on his bed and puts them on.
|
8:45 pm
|
Why don’t you lie down John?”
says the nurse. “You must be tired.”
“Fuck off,” he yells at her.
“Will
you fucking shut up,” screams Magazine Man.
|
9:00
pm
|
John
has been shouting at the top of his voice for 4 hours. Surely he’s
getting tired? No he isn’t - not at all.
|
9:05
pm
|
“To
pee or not to pee?” the man to my right shouts again.
|
9:15 pm
|
John leaves his bed and walks towards the ward entrance. Beyond it, I can see the Nurses’ Station with
all its office equipment. The two nurses stand in his way but with
fists raised, he walks through them.
“I
had very little sleep last night,” I am thinking. “If I were at home,
I’d be going to bed now.”
|
10:00
pm
|
John
is standing in the corridor. I can’t see him but the noise from his
shouting is deafening.
|
11:45
pm
|
I
ask if we can have the ward lights turned off. They are.
|
Thursday
|
|
1:00 am
|
At last! The nurses call
Security and two uniformed guards arrive. I know this will exacerbate
things because John thinks that they are police.
“Fuck
off pigs,” John yells at them. “Go catch some crooks.”
|
1:30
am
|
I
hear a tremendous crash from the corridor. John is knocking over as
much of the furniture as he can.
|
1:45
am
|
A
nurse tells me that they’ve asked John’s daughter to come in, hoping that a
familiar face will calm him.
|
2:00
am
|
I'm told that his daughter has said that she can’t come because she has to be up early for
work.
|
3:00 am
|
There has been a standoff for 2
hours between John and the guards. When they get close, John spits at
them.
The
guards have managed to get John just into the ward but he is still 20 feet
from his bed, shouting and swearing all the time.
|
3:15 am
|
The nurses and the guards have
obviously concocted a plan:
1. While the two guards try to
talk to John, the nurse slips around behind.
2. After a second or two, she
taps him on the shoulder.
3. John turns round and
immediately, the two guards grab his arms and pinion them.
4. Quick as a flash the nurse
produces a hypodermic syringe and injects him in the arm.
John
yells louder than ever and is trying to wrestle with the guards but they are
too strong for him. One guard grabs and lifts his legs, while the other
lifts him at the chest. They carry him over to his bed, place him on it
and then raise the bottom of the bed so John’s feet are some 3 feet above
his head.
|
3:30 am
|
Every 5 seconds John, who is
now trapped in his bed, is shouting, “HELP” at the top of his voice and he
also yells out that he has wet himself. I wait with bated breath and
then it comes:
“To pee or not to
pee?”
Oh, come on mate! It’s not that funny!
|
3:35
am
|
A
nurse approaches John who is lying awkwardly on his bed. She tries to
soothe him but fails. She gets too close and he lashes out and kicks her
hard in the head.
|
3:40 am
|
Magazine Man stomps over to
John and shouts at him,
“If
you don’t fucking shut up, I’ll fucking do you.”
|
3:45 am
|
The nurse who had been kicked
in the head comes over and asks how I am.
"I'm all right," I
say.
"I'm
just tired but what about you? That was a hard kick.”
She smiles and sighs.
"I'm
fine. It's part of the job.”
|
3:50 am
|
A different nurse comes and
stands by my bed and tells me that they are trying to find spaces in other
wards for us.
“How are you feeling?" she
asks me.
"Very tired," I say.
"You'll be OK in the
end," she says calmly and gently.
"When you die."
"WHAT!" That
woke me up.
"NO, I'm not. What
are you talking about?"
She bends down and whispers,
"We're all going to die and be
with Jesus."
She
pauses. "We're just passing
through."
|
4:00 am
|
Magazine Man is wheeled off to
another ward.
“So long, Suckers” he shouts,
gleefully, as he leaves.
John
shouts out, "HELP!" again very loudly and is showing no signs of tiredness.
|
4:10
am
|
To
Pee Or Not To Pee is taken away too. That leaves Peter and me in the
ward with John.
|
5:40 am
|
The sun has risen and is
shining through the open window. The ward is getting brighter but John
is still shouting very loudly.
“I
can’t understand it, the nurse tells me. “We gave him enough to knock
out a horse. We thought he’d sleep for 10 hours.”
|
5:45 am
|
A new patient is brought into
the vacant space to my left.
“How long has this been going on?” he asks me as John is shouting more than ever.
“About
12 hours,” I sigh.
|
7:00 am
|
I have my blood pressure,
temperature and oxygen level taken.
“That’s a lot better.” The
nurse smiles at me. “You’re
almost normal.”
“Thanks,” I say. “That’s
the nicest thing anyone’s ever said to me.”
In future, I’d like to be known
as,
‘Almost
Normal Terry’.
|
7:00
am
|
Breakfast.
I just have a cup of tea. John won’t say what he wants and Peter has Rice Krispies.
|
7:30
am
|
Peter
can’t eat his cereal. His hand shakes so much that the Rice Krispies
all fall off the spoon before they reach his mouth. A nurse feeds him.
|
8:05 am
|
John is getting quieter.
He’s still shouting but not with the regularity or intensity of before.
New Arrival leaves his bed and pulling the stand holding his drip with him, is walking towards the open
window.
“Where are you going?” asks the
nurse.
“To the window for a
smoke. You wouldn’t want smoke in the ward,” he says.
“You can’t smoke here,” the
nurse says. “There’s oxygen around. It would be dangerous.
I’ll take you outside when I’m not busy.”
”Make it quick then,” New
Arrival grumbled.
“I’ve
normally had 5 or 6 by now. I’m a heavy smoker.”
|
9:00 am
|
John is quiet. Maybe he’s
asleep. Obviously, I’m still awake.
Peter is having an animated
discussion with someone at the end of his bed whom only he can see.
“All right, I’ll get some,” I
hear him say.
Peter leaves his bed and walks
directly towards me. He stops at the end of my bed and starts to pull
at the curtains that surround it. Half the curtain is already off.
“What are you doing?” I shout
at him.
“There’s
a shortage,” he tells me. “They’ve put out a call for curtains.”
|
9:30 am
|
The nurse goes over to New
Arrival and tells him she can take him out for a smoke now.
“About time,” he says.
They are passing the foot of my
bed.
“Give us a cigarette then,” he
demanded of the nurse.
“I haven’t got any,” she says,
looking surprised.
“OK,” says New Arrival, “I’ll
give you some money and you can go to the hospital shop and buy me some.”
“They don’t sell
cigarettes. This is a
hospital.”
“You give free
food. Why not free tobacco?” he moans at the nurse. “I’m a heavy
smoker.”
“Got
a fag?” he asks, looking straight at me.
|
11:00 am
|
A doctor comes to see me and apparently, I really am a lot better.
“Can I go home then?” I plead.
You’re receiving antibiotics
intravenously and you should continue to do so for another 24 hours. So
no.”
“But
I can’t face another night like last night in here.” I whinge.
|
11:15 am
|
After a great deal of pleading,
begging and insistent beseeching on my part, he finally agrees that I could
take the antibiotics in pill form.
That, however, will mean that
I’m discharging myself from hospital care against advice. I have to sign a form
absolving the hospital of any responsibility if anything goes wrong.
Of
course, I agree.
|
12:35 pm
|
John wakes up and starts
shouting that he’s wet himself.
I
don’t care anymore. I’m going home!
|
2:00
pm
|
I
sign the self-discharge form.
|
2:30 pm
|
Caroline comes to collect me.
“How are you, really?” she asks
me.
“I’m
well, I think. Just very tired. I’ll tell you about it later.”
|
I’ve read a lot in the newspapers
recently about poor quality care given by nurses, especially to the old and the
frail. I suppose that those stories must be true but I can’t believe Milton
Keynes Hospital is in any way exceptional or different from most.
Not only would I not want a
nurse’s job, but I also couldn’t do a nurse’s job. No words can convey the admiration
that I have for those I met. They were wonderful, patient, caring and
kind. Nurses tolerate the intolerable. They work in impossible
conditions and I think they are almost saint-like.
What can be done with patients
like John? He is clearly suffering from dementia, as he had absolutely no
idea where he was, what was happening or what he was doing. He was
constantly bewildered and very frightened. I can’t even start to think of a
solution.
Another thing: Every nurse
that I met in those 24 hours spoke with a foreign accent, and came from Eastern
Europe, The Far East or the Caribbean,
I wonder what UKIP would have to
say about that.
22/5
David, whom I
was at school with and I have mentioned several times in the past, left the
following as a 'Comment'.
I don't think many people read
the comments and so I have put it here. It amuses me hugely.
I was in hospital in the orthopaedic ward, in May 1971 having knee surgery. On
Saturday afternoon, just before kickoff, the patients were taken
(wheeled/carried/lifted) into the TV room to watch the Cup Final between
Arsenal and Liverpool. Because of the hospital’s location, virtually all
the patients were Arsenal supporters.
It was 0-0 after
90 minutes. Liverpool scored in extra time. The room went very quiet. 10 minutes later, Arsenal scored.
My companions, in
the euphoria of the moment, forgot why they were there. They leapt to
their feet, arms raised and then came crashing down. It was like watching
a room full of dominoes collapsing. 5 of them had to be helped up from
the floor by nurses and 3 of them had to have their plaster casts reset.
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