There are three
other ambulance crews waiting to handover in the triage area, so we take our
place in the queue, tucking ourselves in as best we can, somewhere between CT
and the exit. It’s only when we’ve settled in that I notice Richard, the lead
consultant, standing by a patient on a stripped-down ambulance trolley. The
patient is wearing a collar, lying in a strange position on a vac-mat, but
although it strikes me as odd that he’s not fully immobilised, I assume he’s
been semi-cleared, waiting to go off for x-ray or something.
‘Now don’t move,’
says Richard. ‘You’ve got a fractured femur, remember?’
‘I can’t believe
this is my second go.’
‘And you’ve got
a lot of alcohol on board. Okay? Happy?’
‘Delirious.’
‘Good.’
Richard goes
over to the other crews but I can’t quite hear what he asks them. It all seems
very odd, but still, I take it at face value. I make sure our patient is as
comfortable as possible, then look over my paperwork to see if there’s anything
else I want to add.
Suddenly,
Richard is standing in front of me.
‘Could you come
in and hand my patient over for me, Spence?’ he says. Before I can say
anything, he takes me by the shoulder and leads me over.
‘This is Luke.
Twenty-four years old. Luke’s been drinking alcohol today. He jumped over a
wall and fell twenty feet onto concrete. Landed on his left side. A period of
unconsciousness. Reduced air entry on the left, query left femur. Okay? They’ll
be ready for you in a minute. I’ve just got to go in and set up.’
And he hurries
off through the resus doors.
Intensely odd.
‘Hi Luke,’ I
say, looking down at the patient. And then: ‘Oh! Luke!’
Luke is a nurse
who works at A&E.
He wriggles
around on the vac-mat.
‘Just hold
still,’ I tell him. ‘It’s important you don’t move your head.’
There are no
straps on him, no tape securing the blocks. Why isn’t he fully immobilised? Reduced
air entry? Fracture femur? Where’s the oxygen? The Kendrick? And why aren’t
there any poles on this trolley? Why is it in the down position? And any moment now I’m supposed to handover to the resus team.
Why?
I’m utterly
confused.
Luke sits up.
‘I can’t bear
this fucking collar,’ he says, turning his head from side to side. ‘Is it on
straight?’
‘Luke! Luke! You
must keep still and lie flat. You’ve had a long fall and you might have hurt
your neck.’
He lies down
again.
‘Yes, but is it
on straight? I can’t believe I put it on myself. This is fucking ridiculous.’
‘I hardly think
you put this collar on yourself,’ I tell him, holding his head still between
the blocks. The head injury is making him
combative, I think.
But there’s no
blood. He doesn’t smell of alcohol. His tracksuit and t-shirt are immaculate.
‘Where did you
fall?’ I ask him.
‘I don’t know,’
he says, staring up at me. ‘The beach? You decide.’
‘You don’t
remember?’
He stares at me.
Richard pushes
the resus doors open.
‘Come on. Ready
for you now. Bring the patient through.’
Not only is the
trolley in the down position and without any poles to steer, but there’s
something wrong with the wheels. They’re locked into the in-line position, and
the red button that normally releases them won’t respond to my kicks. It’s difficult
to do that, anyway, as two nurses are hurriedly dragging us forward and not stopping
to do anything about it, even though they’re forced to lift the trolley a couple
of times to make the turns.
The team is standing
around a resus bed ahead of us.
‘Let’s get the
patient across and take the story once he’s over,’ says Richard, running the
show from a white metal trolley off to the side. ‘Ben? Airway and primary
survey please.’
‘Is he on a
scoop?’ says another consultant.
‘Er – no.
Apparently not.’
‘Why’s the
trolley so low?’
‘I don’t know. Battery’s
flat.’
‘How are we
supposed to get him over?’
‘Someone could
get a replacement battery from another trolley.’
‘Just lift him up
on the mattress for now.’
‘It’ll sag in
the middle.’
‘We’ll pretend
it doesn’t.’
‘No, no. Let’s
do this properly. Nurse, fetch the scoop.’
There’s a lot of
unconvincing fussing around.
Ben starts his
assessment, leaning over me in the cramped conditions beside the trolley.
None of it makes sense.
And then
suddenly I understand. And all the facts and scraps of information that should’ve
tipped me off, crowd in:
The sheepish crews.
The strange trolley.
Richard, loitering outside resus with a seriously
injured patient.
Luke.
‘I can’t believe I put this collar on myself’
‘Where did you fall?’
‘You decide.’
This isn’t real
life.
Nor is it a waking
dream.
This is a
scenario.
‘Let me tell you
the story now,’ I say, speaking across the team. ‘ We’ve got Luke. Twenty-four
years old. Alcohol. Fell twenty feet onto concrete. Unco for a time. Query
reduced air entry on left; query left femur. Richard? Would you mind if someone
else took the head? Only I ought to be attending to my patient outside.’
‘Of course.
Thanks for your help.’
I’m blushing so
much as I exit the doors, when I peel my blue gloves off and throw them in the
bin I want to jump head-first after them.
10 comments:
Oh, man.
If nobody had informed me beforehand, I would SO have walked into that as well. Then out again, ears glowing so much that cars brake.
And it is an easy mistake to make, after all they were being pretend serious. Now why didn't anyone tell you that they were doing a scenario, and almost as importantly, why are thy running a scenario like this when they can have the real thing every day?
I don't know why he didn't just tell me at the beginning : 'This is a training exercise, Spence...' Maybe he thought that would be obvious (blushes again).
And why are they running a scenario...(psst - there were cameras in that day, some kind of promo event - wonder if that had any bearing on the matter...) Thank god in heaven the cameras weren't in resus to see me do that handover.
It left me with the horrible feeling that I'm actually in that category of people who, when they're expose to some unusual event just accept everything that's happening and fail to take action. 'That can't possibly be a piano just about to drop on my hea...' kind of thing.
Whadda sap.
Thanks for commiserating, Tom. Very much appreciated :)
Perhaps it's because I've read your books Spence that I was waiting for some supernatural explanation.
Or possibly a wind up for your birthday,with Frank jumping out of a giant cake....
However,they should have done the decent thing and pointed out it was a training exercise.After all,it's not as if your job entails sitting around in an office drinking tea.
I have to say I don't think Frank would've fallen for any of this. In any kind of situation - simulated or otherwise - I would always follow Frank above anyone else. (Even me.)
BTW - I would pay good money to see him leap out of a cake.
Well. Some. :/
Gosh, I'd be livid. Like with my first fire drill at work and me the only one who thought we were all going up in smoke. Ha ha and bloody ha.
Maybe time for a little holiday, Spence?
But then again, you're supposed to take these things seriously - so you were quite right to act like you did.
We booked our holiday just the other day, Sabine. Twelve days in Croatia. That should straighten me out nicely 8:)
Why were there cameras? Is your A&E going to be on the TV?!
I don't know! I was too scared to ask. As soon as I saw all their gear I pulled a sheet over my head and ran out hoping they'd think I was a ghost... :/
I was totally waiting for the part where you bolt upright in a cold sweat. The reality was more embarrassing than even I could dream up. But really, what were you supposed to do? I mean, he wasn't your patient, ostensibly he was being taken care of, and you didn't have the time to do anything about any of it. Sooooo…
It was def like those dreams where you go into an exam and not only have you not revised at all but you realise you've forgotten to get dressed...
I watched 'Singin in the Rain' the other day (wait - there is a point to this). Apart from Cosmo my favourite character's Lena Lamont. She's got some great lines. When I came out of Resus and threw my gloves in the bin, I really should've said: Whad'ya think I am? Dumb or somethin'?'
:0) x
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