Terry is lying where he fell sometime in the night, wedged in the
corner of the bedroom, his cadaverous arms and legs crooked up like some giant,
woebegone crane fly. His only covering is the curtains he pulled down on top of
him, hooks, track, plaster and all. Luckily it’s been warm and the radiator stayed
off, otherwise he’d have suffered burns to his side. All in all, though, he
seems to have escaped any fractures, cuts or scrapes. The carer tells us that Terry’s
ninety-two and pretty fit. A little underweight, perhaps, increasingly reliant
on the carers first thing in the morning, last thing at night, but other than
that, rubbing along pretty well. Unfortunately he’s not been able to throw off
a chest infection that’s been bothering him the last few months. He spent some weeks
in a home to help him over it, was discharged just the other day. But his
situation has deteriorated. And now here he is, stuffed up on the floor in the
corner of the bedroom, confused, distressed, his withered buttocks and legs
encrusted with faeces.
I fetch a selection of cleaning materials from the ambulance and
together we set to cleaning him up. He’s so light I can lift him at the hip on
my own, giving Rae and the carer just enough room to make a quick scoop of the
worst of the mess, and slide an inco pad underneath so we can get busy with a
bowl of soapy water. In fact, I’m tempted to clean him up like I used to clean
the girls when they were babies: left hand / ankles; right hand / wipes.
The whole time we’re working, Terry mutters incomprehensibly. We make
reassuring noises. None of it connects.
Terry’s daughter, Margaret comes in. A brisk elderly woman with brisk
elderly hair, she harrumphs into the room, dumps her bag and keys on the bed, and
immediately sets about getting in the way as efficiently as if it the whole
thing was scripted.
‘I’ll change that water’ she says. She takes the bowl of suds, misjudging
the weight and slopping it everywhere, then comes back with clear cold water
and a bar of soap.
‘Thanks’ I say. ‘Watch out for the curtains. They’re quite badly
soiled.’
‘Oh’
She dumps them on the floor, right in the middle of the route Rae
had cleared for the carry chair.
‘I knew he wasn’t ready to come back,’ she says, wiping globs of
faeces from her hands on an old towel then tossing it onto the bed right by my
shoulder. ‘I’ve never seen him as bad as this’
Even though the carer has told us a fair bit of information, she’s new
to this address and doesn’t know the whole story. Whilst we work, I ask Margaret
a few more questions about Terry, to get a clearer picture of what might be
wrong – his past medical history, medication regime and so on. It’s impossible
to get much sense from her, though. Even a simple question about when he last
saw the doctor only acts as a door through which she hurries down another long avenue
of stress and complication.
Meanwhile, the carer finds a clean pair of pyjama bottoms.
‘I don’t suppose you have all this written down somewhere, do you?’
I ask Margaret, feeding Terry’s legs through.
‘Why? I’m telling you
now!’ she says, then turns away, throwing up her hands in frustration.
4 comments:
Obviously that's your fault for not remembering every single detail Margaret gave you Spence.After all,it's not like you're busy.
Although in fairness to Margaret,I'm sure she was extremely concerned about the state of her father.
... I mean, I didn't exactly have a pen in my hand at the time (BTW - I was cured of chewing the end of my pen a LONG time ago). But to be fair, you're right - she was worried about her dad. If I'd have been a little more collected, I might have advised she put together a handy crib sheet for future episodes. Maybe next time.
I swear, Spence, if it's not one thing it's another! If the patient is cooperative, seems there's always some relative ready to pop up and make things just a *little* more complicated for you.
I suppose she was flustered at the situation. I'd like to assume she possesses more common sense in the daily faculties of life, but you never really know...
I would think she's normally a lot calmer, Cass. No doubt this situation has been steadily declining, everyone doing their best to keep him at home & safe - but reaching a point now where some other, more drastic change is needed. Stressful, to say the least. It's often the case we only see people at breaking point!
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