April’s dog Ken is curled up on a leopard-pattern cushion the far
side of the sofa. These days he doesn’t even look up, he’s so used to crews coming
through the door, all hours of the day and night. It’s a shame he doesn’t look
up. It’s always a pleasure to trade glances with those kindly black eyes. Ken is one of the most photogenically scruffy terriers I know, a generous scrawl of
extra fur at the end of his muzzle, which, along with his neat build and fancy
blue neckerchief, make him look like a famous author resting before another
exhausting round of book signings.
‘Don’t get up’ I tell him.
He doesn’t.
April suffers from asthma and recurrent chest infections. The fact
that she smokes doesn’t help, firstly because the very last thing her damaged
lungs need is smoke, and secondly because it means she can’t have home oxygen.
So April is on a loop of treatment every bit as chronic as her condition. She
has a cigarette, she struggles to breathe, her inhalers are ineffective, she
calls for an ambulance, she responds to treatment or gets taken in for more,
depending. Every crew knows the score, but if you haven’t been here much it’s
easy to be spooked by the way she presents, unable to speak, the laboured way
she breathes, the dreadful wheeze. It’s difficult to resist the urge to treat
and move as soon as possible, especially when you read on previous sheets that
she’s spent time in ITU with the same. The fact is she does respond, though.
She never wants to go to hospital. She wants to stay home, curled up on the
sofa with Ken. And no-one can blame her – or for smoking, come to that.
It’s the kind of estate that would have the Dalai Lama tearing the
strip off a new pack of Lights. On a notoriously run-down estate, in a
tributary of particular awfulness, the close April lives on is a strandline of
three storey buildings, many of the flats shuttered up and empty, the communal
gardens a no-man’s land for dogs, drunks and dead appliances. It’s a wonder all
she does is smoke – and watch DVDs, and snuggle with Ken, and call the
ambulance.
We fix her up a neb of Ventolin and Atrovent, and wait for her SATs
to improve. I write her sheet out from memory. Not so long ago, in a dizzy rush
of ‘let’s fix this’ enthusiasm (now and again I’ll feel it, a gloriously
ludicrous urge to jump on my horse and charge the cannons), I tried sending
some emails and making some calls. What does the GP make of all this? The
Community Respiratory people, the psych team? Are they fully aware? Everyone’s
getting it in the neck. Surely there must be something we can do to cut down the number of calls?
‘Honestly – there’s a stack of ambulance sheets about three feet
high,’ I tell the Clinical Desk. ‘And that’s just this year.’
‘I know,’ says the paramedic the other end. ‘Let’s have a look at
her record. Here we are – averaging two call outs a day every day, except when
she’s in hospital. That’s pretty impressive.’
‘So what do you reckon?’
Sigh.
‘I don’t know,’ she says. ‘Perhaps we could move in. At least we’d
save on diesel.’
April’s breathing seems okay now – or better than it was, at least. Still wheezy, but not as bad. She says she’ll
see her GP and talk about how things are going when the surgery opens later.
The other end of the sofa Ken takes one of those unexpectedly deep
breaths that dogs make when they’re absolutely, fully and most completely
relaxed. He licks his chops a couple of times, settles another inch
‘Good boy,’ says April, reaching over to tickle him on the side.
The dog rolls over, exposing a luxuriously furred underbelly. April
tickles him there.
‘All right then?’
‘All right.’
I add my sheet to the others. Tidy up.
‘See you later.’
She waves.
April, Ken and me - we know it won’t be long.
9 comments:
Ken? Bruce? Spence? I'm all confoosed.
Obviously not oxygen but why cant they give her a nebuliser at home??
Tracey
TV - Oops - the perils of changing a character's name and then making all the changes manually... correction made / cheque in the post.
Anon - She does have a nebuliser at home - doesn't seem particularly effective, though. What with one thing & another maybe having oxygen would help? (If she stopped smoking...) I suppose the point is, her condition should be manageable at home.
Thanks for the comments :)
Tricky one Spence.
Unless April wants to give up the oily rags,there's not a lot you can do.
True dat - but it'd be interesting to do a cost analysis of that particular exercise of freedom. Just to increase the sense of frustration, of course...
Smoking is such an incredibly unhealthy activity and yet, I agree that sometimes there's not much else in a person's life. I watched my younger brother smoke himself into a fatal heart attack at 48 and I miss him dreadfully. His widow stills lights up and so do his daughters. Despite knowing what it will do to you... I don't understand at all.
So sorry to hear about your brother, Lynda. 48 is no age at all.
Smoking is such a difficult habit to break - primarily because it quickly becomes the way you cope & the way you pace yourself through the day. I smoked for years. When it came to it, I found the hardest thing to cope with was that feeling of a regular support or comfort. Glad I managed to quit, though. (Still get cravings, even this far down the road...)
Someone should introduce her to e-cigs.
That's not a bad idea. She must have come across them, though - surely? Next time I see her I'll ask. :)
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