Mr Warding,
BEM, DCM, DL, is sitting on a rich leather sofa in the lounge, one arm in a
blood pressure cuff and the other on the armrest, wired up for an ECG, his
shirt unbuttoned to the navel, his velvet-lined jacket slung neatly across
his lap. Two of the residential home staff hang back, one with a folder of
notes, the other with a bag of medication. Stephen, the first paramedic on
scene, is just finishing his examination; he introduces us to Mr Warding, then
carries on.
‘So -
to re-cap for these guys,’ he says, ‘you’d just finished lunch, you felt a bit
swimmy, you were helped to the sofa where it looks like you may have passed out
for a minute or two. At no time did you have any chest pain, and you don’t have
any now. Is that right?’
‘Ye-es.
That is correct. Now look here. What’s going to happen to my wife when I go in
to hospital? She has some significant health problems of her own, as you no
doubt have been informed by these good people here to my left and my right. I
am her main carer, although to be frank my responsibilities are pretty light,
limited to a few words of conversation, perhaps a little push around the
gardens in her wheelchair. But you see even that is rather too much for me
these days. I’m interested to know what you recommend we do about this?’
Mr
Warding speaks slowly and precisely. Whenever he needs more air he stops, squeezes
his eyes shut and pulls a peculiar expression, a cute and animal thing, a cross
between a smile and a stifled sneeze. With his hanging jowls, great, fleshy
paws and stubby legs, he could be a gigantic species of mole, ninety-five years
old, reminiscing about the lawn.
‘Has
something like this ever happened to you before?’ asks Stephen, writing down
the last of his observations, then putting the board down, unwrapping the cuff,
disconnecting the leads.
‘Well in
actual fact it has. (Smile). It was
very much the same circumstance, a post-prandial fainting fit, barely a week
ago. (Smile) I was assisted to this
sofa, made comfortable with cushions and so forth, water and the like. An ambulance
was dispatched and duly arrived (Smile)
They trussed me up with wires and so on, as indeed you have, and they found
absolutely nothing wrong with me at all. (Smile).
They recommended I travel with them to the Accident and Emergency department of
the local hospital, and I followed their advice. (Smile) As one should. (Smile)
More tests, more collective scratching of heads. I was there quite some hours.
It was dark when I was finally delivered back to my room, with no more insight
into my condition than before.’
Stephen
has packed away all his things and looks about ready to force a decision.
‘So, Mr
Warding. All things considered I would imagine you had a simple faint. I don’t
think it’s your heart, but of course that’s just a guess.’
‘A guess? Well, now, I’d like a little more
than guess work, if you wouldn’t mind. (Smile)
What I’m really after are some definitive answers. Something I can hang my hat
on. I can’t very well carry on like this, you know. Collapsing about the place
for no good reason.’
‘When I
say guess, I mean an educated
guess.’
‘An educated guess. Yes. I see.’
‘Based
on what I’ve found. Which is nothing, to be blunt. But obviously I can’t do
blood tests, and I’m not a doctor.’
‘No.’
‘You
have plenty of carers around you, Mr Warding. One of your options would be to
stay here at the home and see how you go. If anything changes, you can always
call us back again. Or else you can go to hospital with these guys, and go
through some more tests. And see a doctor, of course.’
‘Well,
now, that’s most interesting,’ says Mr Warding, ‘Thank you.’ He fiddles with
his gold cufflinks. I’m amazed he can handle such small things with those
paddle-sized fingers, but he seems to manage okay. With his sleeve restored, he
carries on.
‘You
think I should go to the hospital and see a doctor? Well – of course my over-riding
concern would be my wife. Who would be there to take care of her whilst I’m
away seeing these doctors and having all these tests?’
‘Or you
could stay here with the care staff and see how you go.’
Both
women step forward. I half expect to see them curtsey.
‘We’ll
keep a close eye on you, Mr Warding. And Mrs Warding.’
He
glances at them both, then sighs, and sinks about a foot further into the
chair.
‘It’s
not as if she does all that much,’ he says. ‘Dementia, you know. A terrible
business. Mostly she just sits there, staring. But then again, often she
carries on awfully, crying out, you know? Making a dreadful show of it. I don’t
know what to do. I simply don’t know what to do.’
Stephen
has shouldered one of the bags and has the other in his hand. He stands over Mr
Warding, willing him to make a decision.
A
grandfather clock gently tings the quarter.
A
blackbird chip-chip-chips out in the garden.
‘Now
then,’ says Mr Warding. (Smile) ‘What are my options?’
7 comments:
I haven't commented in a while Spence, but I read everything you write -- and this post is exactly the reason why. So well illustrated, I feel as if I were sitting with Mr. Warding myself. Wonderful!
Thanks, Alan. Very much appreciated. And don't worry about commenting (although it's always really nice to hear from you). It's great to know you're 'out there' reading!
Hope you're well
S
Do you ever get frustrated with calls like these? What are your most frustrating/disliked calls?
I'm guessing you ended up taking him in...
GP - Not really! He was such a lovely, interesting character (despite his slow way of talking!)
The call I find the most difficult to take is the Frequent Flyer (someone who uses 999 inappropriately and very often). Unbelievably frustrating. And made worse by the fact no-one seems to be able to do a thing about it.
tpals - Yep. Tried to steer him away from a hospital trip and ref to his GP, but he wouldn't have it. Of course, A&E was as over-flowing as ever (which he was shocked to see). :/
A very erudite gentleman there Spence.
Did he have the look of Noel Coward about him?
Noel Coward's voice in Alfred Hitchcock's body :/
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