Opening My Heart (32 page)

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Authors: Tilda Shalof

BOOK: Opening My Heart
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Being professional – that’s the easy part – but patients expect so much more! In addition to all of the above expectations, at various times we’re supposed to play the roles of mother/father, brother/sister, enforcer, confident, teacher, friend, coach, and mentor – not to mention ordinary angels and everyday heroes. Unlike most patients, my expectations of my nurses are more modest. With all they have to deal with, if they give me the correct meds and stay alert to problems, I’m satisfied. Most patients want their nurses to make them feel safe and comforted. Some even want a relationship. They like it when their nurses show emotions, but only if they are in synch with what they are feeling; nurses who don’t show their emotions are deemed hard-hearted and cold. Can you imagine a profession where emotional expression is a job requirement? Welcome to nursing.

But I’ll admit, at times we can be too
real, too human
. Oh, I’ve seen some inappropriate things in my day. A nurse who wore outlandish earrings that dangled to her shoulders. Another nurse with a habit of resting his feet up on the desk at the nursing station in full view of the public. One time, I saw a nurse chowing down on
a full
-course dinner – chicken wings, French fries, corn on the cob while sitting right outside her patient’s door. The family was gathered
around the critically ill patient’s bed, and the nurse was contentedly eating her dinner in front of them. She was either oblivious to their crisis or at least wasn’t going to let it ruin her appetite.

Then there are inadvertent
faux
pas and bloopers, like the nurse who was leaning on the dialysis machine when her long hair got caught in the wheels. It sounds painful, but her extensions snapped right off and she wasn’t the least bit hurt, though her braids gummed up the circuit and brought the machine to a standstill. She was laughing so hysterically – along with her patient – she could barely call for help.

Nurses aren’t the only ones who blunder. Once, a staff doctor arrived for a family meeting. He sat down with the distraught family and proceeded to tell them bad news. The complicated operation he’d just performed on their mother had been unsuccessful and her condition was very grave. I watched the family’s expression move from shocked to puzzled to bemused and relieved. I realized what was wrong. I tapped the surgeon on the shoulder and informed him he was talking to the wrong family. Wow, that was an awkward moment.

Then there was a small, silly mishap that still makes me chuckle. During rounds one day, a staff hematologist was speaking to the team, outlining a patient’s rocky course of chemotherapy protocols. For some reason, he happened to look down at his leg. I watched him slowly peel off a sock from his pants, stuck there from dryer static. He merely stuffed it into his white lab coat pocket and continued on without missing a beat. I admired his aplomb.

I’ve had my own cringe-worthy moments. Not the worst indiscretion, but one of the most embarrassing happened years ago when I was still working with Laura’s Line. An enthusiastic foodie, and onto a new health kick, I had bought a jar of Loblaw’s Savoury Seven-Bean soup and ate it for lunch. Delicious and nutritious, full
of fibre and especially
beans
, later that afternoon, I began to experience its explosive
side-effects
. I had to beg various nurses to cover for me as I kept madly dashing out to the bathroom, each time trying to make it to a different location, so as not to be identified with the trail of stink bombs. It didn’t take long for Justine to “sniff” me out. “It’s you who’s going around here spreading the love!” she said in her booming voice. Busted! “This one you can’t blame on your patient.” Yes, we had been known to occasionally blame our own gaseous emissions on our innocent, unsuspecting patients.

I tiptoe out of my room and look down the long, deserted hallway. Not a soul around. I feel like I’m playing hooky – but remind myself, I’m a patient; I’m off-duty.

How short the night seems at home in your bed sleeping and how long it drags in the hospital when you’re working! There’ve been times when I’ve had to remind myself to keep the faith, that the night would eventually come to an end. There have been moments, though, of such intense fatigue that I managed to muster only the minimal wakefulness required to do my job safely, and not a drop more. Often I recall a quote by F. Scott Fitzgerald that I like: “In the real dark night of the soul it is always three o’clock in the morning.” Sure enough, even now, I look at my watch. It’s ten to three. Once, in the middle of a long night shift, I asked Maureen, a hardworking, seemingly tireless nurse, “What do you do when you feel tired?” I sat down out of my own fatigue to hear her response. “I don’t allow myself to think about myself,” she answered still in motion, in the midst of mixing a medication for her patient. “I just keep going.”

For me it’s more of a challenge to stay so focused, especially at night when I’m tired. Sometimes my imagination can get carried away, and I’m not the only nurse who’s like this. One night in the
ICU
, I stood at the window in my patient’s room, staring out at the
downtown deserted streets, the traffic lights changing needlessly, unused parking lots, and empty, lit-up skyscrapers.
A crime could easily be committed
, I thought.
There would be no witnesses and the corpse won’t be found until morning
. I felt someone creeping up behind me. There was a breath at the back of my neck. A whisper blew into my ear and a velvet voice purred, “Perfect conditions for a murder, don’t you think?” I twirled around to see Valerie, a nurse who wrote true crime stories in her spare time. “Wouldn’t those icicles make the perfect murder weapon?” She pointed out long, sharp ones hanging from the ledge of the floor above. “When they melt – poof! – there goes the evidence. Something to think about, isn’t it?” She turned and went back to her patient.

I come out of my room, bleary-eyed, but still can’t sleep. The nurses at the nursing station look tired. I wonder if they’ve taken breaks or had a chance to rest. I hope so. If they do, they will be more alert and safer. Believe me, you don’t want a tired nurse giving you your meds or taking your vital signs.

Yolanda sees me and gets up. “Are you having pain?”

No, I feel fine, but I ask if they mind if I sit out here for a while with them.

“Feel like you’re missing out on the convo?” another nurse asks.

“Sort of,” I admit and then, on an impulse, ask, “Hey, could I read my chart?”

“Go ahead,” he says with a nod and hands it to me. Either I’ve caught them in an unguarded moment or they’ve allow me access because of my insider status.

I leaf through the pages, reading the story of me, told in point form, graphs, and numbers. Medical history, lab results, medication orders, consults, reports, consent forms, test results, progress notes, even my discharge summary, all ready for me to leave in the morning – it’s all here. The handwritten notes of the doctors of
various specialties, nurses, respiratory therapists, physios, chaplain, etc., get intermingled, so your eye always gets drawn to the most legible entries, which often belong to nurses. I know one doctor who says he never reads nurses’ notes, only doctors’. That’s a shame. He’ll miss out on important information. On the other hand, I’ve seen
ICU
residents write their daily progress summary on their patients based entirely on information cribbed from nurses’ notes.

“Progress notes” are a log of events, sometimes organized in “SOAP” format, starting with Subjective data of what the patient says, then Objective observation. Assessment is what is gleaned from your actual examination, and then there’s the Plan of care. Every few years, a new charting style is rolled out, along with a team hired to teach and implement it, then evaluate its effectiveness. I’ve heard that in some places “narrative charting” is coming into vogue. It allows patients to record their experience, to tell their stories in their own words. It reminds me of an Israeli newspaper that for one day invited poets and writers, instead of journalists, to report the news. “The clothes flapping in the breeze, warmed by the sun,” conveyed the weather as vividly as a meteorological report.

Reading my chart is an unsettling experience. I kind of wish I hadn’t. It’s yet another case of
TMI
– Too Much Information. I saw in black and white that from 1230 hours to 1355 hours my heart was stopped: ischemic time. Then, later, in the
ICU
, I was restless and delirious. I read the nurses’ assessment of my condition, how they washed me, handled my bodily fluids, and cleaned me. It’s all here, my overuse of the narcotic pain pump and my extreme anxiety. There’s even a note dating back a few years about my cantankerous behaviour in the
ER:
“Hostile, demanding to be seen immediately.”
How embarrassing!
As for reading your own chart? I wouldn’t recommend it. What good can come of it? And it feels
like I’ve intruded on the staff’s territory, infringed on their rights. Caregivers deserve privacy, too, from us. We should let them do their work in peace.

It didn’t take me long to read through my fairly thin chart, but some patients have charts so extensive they are piled high in tall stacked volumes. Once, I had a patient who had a droopy eyelid and I mentioned it on rounds. To the team, it seemed like a new and ominous finding, possibly indicating a neurological problem. An
MRI
was ordered, along with other tests. Later, ploughing through the voluminous chart, I read that twelve years ago, the patient had brain surgery for a seizure disorder, leaving her with a weak eyelid. Upshot was, the
MRI
was cancelled and we returned to focusing on the patient’s current problem.

Peoples’ health histories can be so complex and charts are invaluable records, but the challenges to organize all that material, get it online, have it easily accessible to all the professionals caring for the patient and yet protect patient privacy is a huge and complex undertaking; a single, comprehensive, integrated electronic chart still eludes us, but we’re well on our way and I’m sure it will happen one day soon. Until it does, it’s also up to us to be responsible for our own information, keep track of records, tests, results, reports, lists of medications, and so on as best as we can. Maybe in the future our record will be so accessible and interactive that we could monitor our medical conditions and take on even more responsibility for our own health care.

But while the move to electronic charting and computerized medication dispensing machines are improvements, they have changed the way we work. For example, to chart a patient’s vital signs, I have to physically leave the patient altogether or merely look away, log on, go through screens, and enter the data. Likewise, to retrieve a medication, someone has to cover my patient so that I
can leave the bedside to go to the medication station, log on to the computer, flip through a few screens to open the door of the cupboard or refrigerator to select each drug I need. Back in the days of yore, our nurse manager used dollar-store tin muffin trays that had a cup for diuretics, sedation, inotropes, antiarrythmics, and so on. Medications were kept at patients’ bedsides, with narcotics the only drugs under lock and key. In some ways, life was simpler back then. Though I do remember one time, I arrived home from work, reached for my house key, and discovered it was the narcotics key. I had to go all the way back to the hospital to return it. That wouldn’t happen anymore. Now there are no keys to worry about with the high-tech security measures in place. We access medications with our individual “biometric profiles.” A scan of our fingerprints opens the locked door. Only time will tell if these measure will improve patient safety.

Computerized charting will reduce transcription errors and eliminate illegible writing. It will also help protect patient privacy so I probably won’t have the experience I had recently when I was standing in a crowded elevator next to a cardiologist who was flipping through a patient’s chart. I could easily read the name, address, diagnosis, and the treatment. With an electronic chart, it’s not as possible for health care workers to trespass into friends or celebrities’ electronic charts, which are more secure than paper ones. There are undoubtedly additional benefits that I can’t even imagine, but there’s still one thing I have against computers: they take me away from patients. Time and attention spent staring into an inanimate screen when I’d rather be at patients’ bedsides, caring for their bodies, undistracted by technological gadgets, fully present, face to face, being with them and listening to their stories.

I sit at the nursing station, still in my hospital gown, and start to feel chilled. Nurse Yolanda drapes a warmed-up blanket around
my shoulders and places a cup of chamomile tea beside me. How does she know I feel chilled?

She guides me back to my room and gives me two pain pills.

“Is this normal?” I ask her about my darkening incision.

“Yes. Red, purple, then back to your natural colour. That’s how a scar heals.”

On her brown skin, too? I wonder, but feel too shy to ask. I chuckle to myself, remembering a Nurses’ Week celebration where there were raffle prizes to be won. A Jamaican friend who forgot to bring her glasses and asked me to read it to her.

“Golf clubs …” was the first item on the list.

“Don’t want it,” she said.

“Day at the spa …”

“I’d love it!”

“A visit to a tanning salon …”

“Don’t need it!” she said, both of us sharing a dry laugh at that.

I look at Nurse Yolanda. I know nothing about her other than she loves Jesus and is a good nurse. We didn’t get to know each other, but lots of times it’s like that between patients and nurses. A relationship isn’t always necessary for a therapeutic encounter to take place, but I do crave some connection to the people caring for me. I can’t stand to be strangers for long.

Yolanda guides me to my bed. I made it myself this afternoon. It took me a long time and I didn’t do a great job. When patients complain that their bed linens weren’t changed, it’s a reliable indication they are capable of doing it themselves.
The best care is self-care
. We patients have to do as much as we can to help ourselves get better. Maybe there are even ways we can help the people caring for us to do their work.

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