Martin has
fallen in the kitchen. The carer lets us in.
‘Do you need me
for anything? Only...’
I’ve barely
finished saying ‘I don’t think so...’ when she’s grabbed her coat off the back
of a chair, the lift door closes and she’s heading down.
‘Get me up!’
Martin hasn’t
hurt himself, but he’s a fair size and we’ll have to use the inflatable
cushion.
Rae goes back
down to the truck to fetch it; I start taking his obs.
Martin is only
in his early sixties, but his illness is in an advanced stage. He’s PEG fed and
catheterised.
‘How did you get
into the kitchen, Martin?’
‘Walked.’
‘With your
zimmer?’
‘Walked.’
‘Without a stick
or anything?’
‘Walked! Get me up!’
He talks in a harsh monotone, his heavy-lidded
eyes staring at a point six inches beyond the tip of his nose. The paperwork
doesn’t refer to any learning difficulties, but I wouldn’t be surprised.
‘Get me up!’
‘Won’t be a
moment, Martin. I’m sorry there’s a delay, only we need some special
equipment.’
‘Get me up!’
‘Not long now.’
Despite the
eight carers he has each day, the flat is still only marginally habitable.
Excepting a few islands of order – a space at the end of a kitchen work surface
where some medical apparatus has been laid out to dry; some information sheets
in plastic folders tacked to the cabinets; the hospital bed in the lounge and
the cabinet next to it – everything else is tacky and malodorous. At the foot
of the bed is a high chair with a padded blue cushion facing the television, a
pile of porn magazines to one side.
‘Get me up!’
He has a
prominent underbite, exposing a line of greasy grey teeth that glisten under
the kitchen striplight.
‘I can hear the
lift, Martin. She’ll be back in a minute.’
‘Get me up!’
*
The cushion works well, but even so, Martin
is difficult to handle. As each of the four interlinked cushions inflate, the
patient needs to move their feet back to give them some kind of purchase and
stop them slipping forwards. Martin doesn’t seem able to do this.
‘Falling!’ he says.
‘How did you get in the kitchen?’
‘Walked!’
‘I’m just a bit surprised, the way your
legs are at the moment. Are they worse than normal, would you say?’
‘Yes.’
‘I think we’ll have to take you to hospital
then, Martin.’
‘Don’t want hospital.’
‘Let’s get you in our chair and then have a
chat about it.’
He doesn’t seem able to weight bear at all
well, and it’s a struggle to stand him up, take the cushion away and put the
chair behind him. Even when he’s in the chair, he starts to slip forwards
again.
‘Maybe you’re a bit weaker today, Martin.’
‘No. Don’t want hospital.’
‘We can’t very well leave you here like
this, though, can we? How would you get to the loo?’
‘Catheter.’
‘I mean the other loo.’
‘I want my chair.’
But there’s no way we can leave him like
this. Although it feels perilously like kidnap, we bundle him up and start
heading out. It takes a while to leave, though, as we can’t find the key, and have
to phone the care agency to clarify the situation.
Down in the ambulance Martin is as
uncooperative as before. And in the cold light of the ambulance, it does seem
more attitude than illness. All his observations are normal, so
there’s not even much of a suggestion of a UTI or any other organic reason why
he might fall and not be able to get up again.
‘So how are you feeling now to how you
normally feel?’ I ask him, struggling to find a way to phrase it. ‘Do you feel
your normal self is what I mean.’
‘Yes.’
‘Nothing out of the ordinary?’
‘No.’
‘So why did you fall?’
‘Don’t know.’
‘Have you fallen in the past?’
‘Yes.’
‘And gone into hospital?’
‘Yes.’
‘And what did they say, the last time it happened?’
‘Don’t know.’
I shuffle through the papers again.
‘But you didn’t seem able to take your own
weight when we helped you up, Martin.’
‘No.’
‘And that’s normal for you?’
‘Yes.’
‘And you walked to the kitchen?’
‘Yes.’
‘Unaided.’
‘Yes.’
I turn to Rae.
‘I still think he’ll have to go in. Off legs.’
‘Fine,’ she says, and gets into the driver’s
seat.
But after five minutes or so of grinding
clicks and clunks, she turns and looks back at me through the hatch.
‘Won’t start,’ she says.
6 comments:
Rae was pithy there,made me think of Frank.
Difficult with Martin,sounds a surly character.Wonder if that's why the carer left so quickly,or could it be the other way round?
It's hard to know. It could just have been that she was really pressed for time, as they often are. He certainly wasn't the easiest patient in the world. I did think it was weird he had all those porn mags and didn't keep them put away - esp. given that some of his carers are going to be women. But that's the thing about illness - it doesn't magically confer sensitivity or reasonableness. Carers have an enormously difficult task, and don't get nearly enough support & credit.
How embarrassing about the engine not starting...did you have to call out another ambulance to take him in?
And how was your vehicle recovered? Just curious!
Cheers
Dave
Yep - another vehicle to take the patient, then we waited about an hour for the fitters to come and rescue us. But there was a paper shop nearby, so all in all - not too bad! ;)
Martin puts me in the mind of the book "A Confederacy of Dunces". Likely you haven't heard of it, but if you can get a copy, you might enjoy it.
Thanks Blair. I've heard of it but not read it. I'll look out for a copy at the library...
BTW - in a kind of recommendation/swapsie - just finished reading 'The Age of Innocence' by Edith Wharton. Amazing!
Post a Comment