The Intern Blues (18 page)

Read The Intern Blues Online

Authors: Robert Marion

BOOK: The Intern Blues
2.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I was ready to strangle the guy! I had already wasted fifteen minutes looking for him and now he was telling me I was going to have to wait longer. And for all I knew, while I was down fucking around with this technician, Henry could have been arresting up on the ward. I was tempted to run the blood gas myself, but I knew that if I touched the machine the guy would have my head on a platter. And yelling at him was completely pointless because I knew that the more you yelled, the more hostile he'd become, and the longer he would take to run the sample. So I just sat on the stool feeling my blood pressure go through the roof.

Finally, the guy picked up the sample, strolled over to the machine, and did it. The gas was pretty lousy. I ran upstairs and showed the resident. Henry was going into respiratory failure in front of our eyes. He was just going down the tubes. And he was scared shitless.

We called the nephrologist and told him we were going to intubate Henry and bring him over to the ICU, and he told us to go ahead. We called the anesthesiology resident, and he did a great job of intubating him. We put him on a respirator and brought him down the hall
[University Hospital's ICU, located down the hall from the Pediatrics ward, admits patients of all ages]
.

I spent the whole night in there with him. He was all squared away by about three in the morning, but we had to stay and monitor him constantly. At least he was stable on the respirator. He wasn't getting any sicker and he seemed more comfortable. And I didn't have to deal with that lab technician again because the unit has its own blood gas machine.

Then, this morning, we spent until about noon rounding. I felt like warmed-over shit. After rounds, I went back to the ICU to write a note in Henry's chart, detailing what had happened the night before, and as I was sitting there, one of the nurses called a code. There was this obese, middle-aged guy whose heart had completely stopped beating. He was in fucking asystole
[without a heartbeat]
! And there was no doctor around other than me.

I jumped up onto his chest and started doing compressions. After about ten minutes, the critical-care fellow showed up with a bunch of medical residents trailing behind. But all those guys did was stand around for a while and discuss what to do. They didn't even offer to help. Finally, they decided to shock him
[apply an electrical charge to the chest in hopes that this will start the heart beating again]
, so I jumped off his chest. They got his heart beating again and they figured he was stable, so everybody disappeared. I sat back down and tried to finish my note, but fifteen minutes later the same nurse yelled out that the guy had arrested again. And again, nobody was around. So I jumped back on his chest and started CPR again. This time the critical-care fellow showed up with the code team really fast, but again, they all stood around talking while I was doing the resuscitation. Finally I said, “Does somebody else want to do this? I'm from Pediatrics, for God's sake!” I couldn't believe it.

Finally, one of them took over for me and I went to finish my note. They got the guy's heart beating again, but what would have happened if I hadn't been there? The guy would have fucking died because there wasn't a doctor around to do CPR. And I wasn't even supposed to be there. What kind of care are these patients getting?

Amy

OCTOBER 1985

Saturday, October 5, 1985

I really needed things to calm down a little after last month ended, but it doesn't look like that's going to happen. I finally got away from Barry Bresnan, but I wound up on the Adolescents ward at Mount Scopus, and it's been terrible. I'm tired, and I'm fed up. I need a vacation. I have one coming up at the end of this month. I hope I'll be able to make it till then.

It's been really busy on Adolescents and it's very depressing. Half the beds are filled with fourteen- and fifteen-year-olds with leukemia, brain tumors, you name it. And the other half is all girls with anorexia nervosa who are completely crazy! It's impossible to talk to them, it's impossible to do anything for them. They just want to be left alone, do their aerobics, vomit in any secret hiding place they can find, and lose weight. They don't want anyone coming near them, especially not a doctor who might actually be able to do something to help them.

My most difficult patient is this eighteen-year-old girl with choriocarcinoma
[a malignant tumor derived from the products of a pregnancy]
. Two weeks ago, she was completely fine. She knew she was pregnant, and she was looking forward to having the baby. Then suddenly she started having some cramping and bleeding and she came to the ER where the gynecologist saw her. They figured she was having a miscarriage so they did a D and C. The stuff they took out looked strange. They sent it to pathology and found out it was cancer. She got admitted to me on Monday, the first day of the month. We did a quick workup that showed the cancer had spread all over the place, to her lungs, her brain, everywhere.

On Wednesday or maybe it was Thursday, she got sick; she had a headache and was vomiting. The oncologists figured it must have been due to mets in her brain
[metastases to the brain cause increased pressure within the skull, leading to symptoms such as headache, vomiting, irritability, etc.]
. We started chemo
[chemotherapy]
on Thursday afternoon, but that didn't help. In fact, she felt a hundred times worse; she spent all yesterday vomiting. It's pathetic.

I hate going into her room. On the one hand, I know her prognosis isn't bad, even with the mets; but on the other hand, I know what this girl's going to have to go through over the next few months: She's going to have a lot of chemo, her hair's going to fall out, she's going to be vomiting constantly, she'll have to spend a lot of time in the hospital. Also, if we can't eliminate the cancer with chemo, the next step is to do a hysterectomy. It's really sad. And so sudden; I mean, one day, she was looking forward to having a baby, the next day she finds out that not only is she having a miscarriage, but also she's got cancer that's spread all over her body, and if it can't be controlled with medication, she may have to have a hysterectomy and never be able to have any children. She's very depressed; you can't blame her. I haven't told her about Sarah. I don't know if it would be good for her to know I've got a baby. It might depress her more.

She's the worst, but they're all like that. I've got an eighteen-year-old who's got a brain tumor. He was fine until about six months ago, when he started waking up having to vomit every morning, with really bad headaches. He came to the emergency room; they did a CT scan, and it showed this huge mass. He's spent a lot of time in the hospital, getting the works, surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, but he's just gotten sicker and sicker. At this point he knows he's going to die and he doesn't want anything done anymore. He screams at any doctor who comes near him. He only trusts one person and that's one of the nurses.

The only good thing about working on this ward is that there're a lot of doctor types around, so nobody gets too many patients. We've got three interns and two subinterns on our team and the whole ward holds only thirty-five patients, so the most anyone can get is seven if things are equally distributed. But seven of these patients are worth fourteen University Hospital patients!

There is one other good thing about this ward: Susannah's working here this month, too. If she hadn't been around last month, I'm positive I would have gone crazy. As it was, I don't know how I survived it. So it's good to have her here. But I can see that neither of us is going to be able to keep the same hours we had last month. The days of getting out at three o'clock in the afternoon are definitely over.

Things at home are quiet. Sarah has a little cold, but I don't think it's too bad. I'm not worried about it. I've been feeling kind of sick myself, so I think we've probably got the same virus. I spent most of today sleeping. I'm on tomorrow, so I won't get to spend any time with her again. It's really impossible being a mother like this.

Thursday, October 10, 1985, 9:00
P.M
.

What a week! This has definitely been the worst week of my internship. Every bad thing you could think of has happened to me. And it's not over yet. I've got all day tomorrow and I'm on Saturday.

First, Sarah got sick. She woke up last Saturday night at about 3:00
A.M
., screaming her brains out. She had a fever of 103 and she just wouldn't stop crying. I was sure she had meningitis; that's what kept going through my head, “She's got meningitis, she needs a spinal tap, and she'll have to be hospitalized for two weeks and then she's going to end up retarded and I'm going to have to go to work tomorrow and every day from now on and try not to think about it.” I somehow got her and myself dressed and we brought her over to the Jonas Bronck emergency room. She kept crying all the way over; she was inconsolable. Rhonda Bennett was the night float. She saw Sarah right away. I was sure she was going to examine her and turn to me and say she needed to draw blood and do an LP
[lumbar puncture]
, but no, she found that all it was was a bad otitis
[otitis media: infection of the middle ear, a common medical problem during the first few years of life]
. She just gave us some Amoxicillin
[an antibiotic used to treat otitis media]
and Tylenol and said she'd be fine in a couple of days.

What a relief! We went back home but I didn't sleep a wink for the rest of that night. Sarah stayed up screaming until about five in the morning, when I guess the Tylenol started to work. She finally fell asleep, but I had to get up and go to the hospital and be on call like usual, as if nothing had happened. I was tired and nauseous and I couldn't concentrate on anything all day except Sarah. I called Larry about forty times. Sarah had a fever most of the day but it was gone by the night and Larry said she looked better.

I admitted this girl with conjunctivitis
[inflammation of the conjunctiva, the outer part of the eye; also called “pink eye”]
who turned out to have GC
[gonococcus, the bacteria that cause gonorrhea; gonococcal conjunctivitis can be very serious, potentially causing blindness, therefore the infection must be treated very vigorously]
. I washed my hands about a hundred times after I examined her but I was sure I got some of the stuff into my eyes. I was positive I was going to turn out to have GC conjunctivitis.

I got maybe an hour of sleep Sunday night and then I had to stay to start fresh on Monday. By that morning I was sick as a dog. I was vomiting and I was sure I had a fever. Larry was going to take the day off from work and stay home with Sarah, but he got called into his office on some emergency, so he had to leave her with Marie, who I'm not sure I trust with medication. I tried to get my work done so I could get home, but I was running at about 10 percent of my usual speed. Susannah told me just to go home, that she'd take care of my patients, but she wasn't feeling so well herself. Of course, nobody else volunteered to help, neither of the subinterns, who have a total of three patients between them; or the other intern, who I must say had to go to clinic that afternoon; or the resident. I plugged on and on and I didn't get home until about seven. By that point I felt like I was going to die. I didn't even care about Sarah anymore. I just got into bed and fell asleep.

When I woke up on Tuesday my eyes were glued shut. I had conjunctivitis. I was sure I had GC. I wanted to go to the hospital and scratch that girl's eyes out, but when I tried to get up I realized I wasn't going anywhere. I literally couldn't get out of bed. My arms felt like they weighed a ton each. I called Arlene, the chief who was on that day, and told her I had the flu and wasn't able to come in. She gave me a really hard time. “Are you sure you can't make it?” she asked me. “Are you really too sick to come to work?” I couldn't believe it!

Larry had to go to work again that day. Before he left, I had him go out and get me some medicine and I wound up staying home and fighting with Marie all day. We mostly fought over little things, but I'll tell you, it's a good thing I'm away at work all day because if I had to spend a lot of time with that woman, I'm sure it'd be the beginning of World War III. Of course, if I wasn't away at work all day, there'd be no reason for her to be coming into my house.

I couldn't face spending another day alone with her, so I went to work yesterday. I was also on call, and there's no way you can call in sick on a day you're on call. When I got to the ward, I found out nothing had been done on any of my patients the whole day before. They had left everything for me! It wasn't like everyone was busy or anything like that, they just didn't think to help me out. So I had a stack of labs to check, notes to write, consults to call, tests to schedule, tons of scut. I got yelled at by the oncologists for not doing something on one of their patients. How could I have done it? I was sick in bed all day!

And I found out that my patient with choriocarcinoma had developed a painful infection in her mouth. She got these sores last week and they were getting worse so I sent off a culture and it turned out to be monilia
[a common type of fungus]
. It was so painful, she hadn't been able to eat or drink for thirty-six hours! She couldn't chew or bite, and nobody had even thought to give her anything to make her feel better. When I went into her room, she was literally crying in pain. I talked to the oncologists, and they hadn't even been told about it. We decided to give her some morphine to see if that relieved the pain. I shot it into her IV and held her hand. Within three minutes, she was feeling better. What's going to happen to her when I leave at the end of the month?

Anyway, I didn't have a bad night, but I only got about three hours of sleep, and this morning I was feeling lousy again. I don't give a damn anymore about anything! When everybody showed up for work this morning, I just told them I was going home. I came home, went to sleep, and slept until a little while ago. Larry's home and Sarah's pretty much back to normal. I feel better myself today. It's not good being a sick intern. You never get a chance to recover. I can see that this flu is going to drag on until the end of the month because I'm just not going to get a chance to rest it out until then. I'm tired and sick, and I'm upset that I'm not able to be a mother to my baby. I really need this vacation. But even that's been a headache.

We're planning to go to Israel at the end of the month. I don't know if I've mentioned that Larry's whole family lives in Israel. His sister is getting married and we're going to the wedding. But Larry's mother gave me a list of things she wants me to bring for her; nothing expensive or anything, just things that are hard to get there. In order to get the stuff, I'd have to spend a whole day shopping. I don't have time for that. I can't just take a day off from work to go shopping! So I told Larry that unless he goes out and gets the things himself, we're just not going to be able to bring it with us. I'm sorry, but I don't think it was right of her to ask me to get it. It goes back to the fact that she doesn't understand what this internship business is all about. Nobody understands it. Nobody could possibly know what it's like to go through this unless you've gone through it yourself.

The other problem about going on vacation is my schedule. We've got tickets to leave from Kennedy International Airport on Monday, October 28, at 11:00
A.M
. My vacation officially starts that morning, but of course I'm on call the night before. If I work that night, as I'm supposed to, there's no way I'll be able to make it out of the hospital before nine o'clock in the morning. And considering that I'll be signing out to interns who have never been on the ward before and don't know any of the patients, it'll probably be much later than that. There's no way I'm going to make it to the airport on time. So I'm trying to make a change. The only person I could possibly switch with is one of the subinterns. She says she'll think about it, but she's not committing herself yet. If she can't do it, I just might not show up that day.

Sunday, October 20, 1985

I got into a big fight with Marie on Wednesday. I was postcall and tired but I knew we needed some things, so I called before leaving the hospital and told her I was going to be stopping at the supermarket and was there anything special we needed? She said there wasn't, so I just got the things I knew we needed. Then when I got home, I found out we were out of Pampers. I went crazy! “Didn't you realize we were out of diapers?” I asked. She said she forgot, and I let her have it! The bottom line was that the baby had to spend the night without a diaper change because I was too tired to go out again.

Other books

Seducing the Spy by Sandra Madden
MRS3 The Velvet Hand by Hulbert Footner
The Secret of Santa Vittoria by Robert Crichton
Shorts: The Furry Years by John Van Stry
Sizzle and Burn by Jayne Ann Krentz
Tracie Peterson by Forever Yours-1
Curses and Smoke by Vicky Alvear Shecter
Montana Rose by Deann Smallwood