âSeventy over forty,' said Maxine.
âGood,' said Fats, and kicked the pedal. The electric gomer bed roared into action. In less than thirty seconds Mr. Rokitansky was virtually upside down on his noggin, his feet pointing at forty-five degrees and his head jammed against the headboard, down below at the other end.
âBlood pressure, Max? Mr. Rokitansky, how ya doin'?'
Although Mr. Rokitansky didn't look like he was doing too good, as Maxine tried to read his BPâblood pressureâfrom his nearly vertical arm, he said:
PURRTY GUD.
A trouper.
âOne hundred and ninety over one hundred,' said Maxine.
âThis position,' said Fats, âis called Trendelenberg. You can get any blood pressure you want out of your gomer, depending on how much Trendelenberg you order. The reverse of Trendelenberg is what?'
Nobody knew.
âReverse Trendelenberg,' said Fats. âSince most gomers have trouble making a BP, you don't put a gomer in reverse too often.'
Next the Fat Man showed us how to get just the head of the bed up, for pulmonary edema; the foot of the bed up, for stasis ulcers of the foot; the middle of the bed up, for disorders of the middle. Finally, after he'd done everything with the gomer bed but twist it into a pretzel, using Rokitansky for the holes, he became solemn and said in an excited voice. âI've saved the most important control for last. This button controls the height. Mr. Rokitansky, are you ready?'
PURRTY GUD.
âGood, âcause here we go,' and pushing the button, which sent the bed going down, Fats said, âThis is the up-down button and we are going down. Given LAW NUMBER TWO, which is . . .'
âGOMERS GO TO GROUND,' we said automatically.
â. . . the only way to prevent them from hurting themselves is to have the mattresses on the floor. The nurses hate this position âcause they have to go around searching for the bedpans on their hands and knees. We tried it last year and it didn't workâthe traffic in bedpans went down and the place started to smell like the cattle yards in Topeka. However, now we are going up.' Fats shouted out, âGoing up!' pushed the button, and Rokitansky began to rise. During the smooth journey Fats called out, âVacuum cleaners, ladies' lingerie, appliances, toys,' and finally, when Rokitansky was five feet off the ground, chest-level with us all, the Fat Man said, âThis is one of the most important positions. From this height, if a gomer goes to ground it is an automatic intertrochanteric fracture of a hip, and a TURF TO ORTHOPEDICS. This height,' said Fats, beaming, âis called “The Orthopedic.” The penultimate. And now, the ultimate.' Again Fats hit the button, and Mr. Rokitansky floated on up, coming to rest at the level of our heads. âThis height is called “The Neurosurgical.” Going to ground from here results in the TURF TO NEUROSURGERY. And from there, they rarely BOUNCE back. Thank you, gentlemen, see you at lunch.'
âWait,' said Levy, the BMS. âYou're being cruel to Mr. Rokitansky.'
âWhaddaya mean? Mr. Rokitansky, how are you doin'?'
PURRTY GUD.
âBut he always says that.'
âOh yeah? Hey, Mr Rokitansky, hey, you up there, you got anything else you want to tell us?'
We waited with bated breath. From the Neurosurgical Height the word floated down to us: YEAH.
âWhat?'
KEEP THE LOWDOWN LOW.
âGentlemen, thank you again. You will find that if you push the down button, Mr. Rokitansky will come down. Lunch.'
âOf course he wasn't serious,' said Potts. âNo one could be that sadistic. It was a perverted way to try to cheer me up.'
âI think he was,' I said. âI think he meant it.'
âThat's crazy,' said Potts. âYou mean he wants us to use that bed to get old people to break their hips? That's sick.'
âWhat do you think, Chuck?'
âWho knows, man, who knows?'
Potts and I sat at lunch, watching the Fat Man shovel food into his mouth. Chuck, on call that night, had been called away to admit his first patients. All Potts could talk about was how he should have hit the Yellow Man with steroids, and how he wanted to be with Otis, his dog. I felt more confused than scared, puzzled by the Fat Man's version of âthe delivery of medical care.' We were joined by the three terns on another ward, 6-North. Supported by Eat My Dust Eddie and Hyper Hooper was the Runt, with that same shot-out-of-a-cannon look as Potts. Chuck had seen the Runt earlier in the day and had told me how nervous the Runt was: âMan, he's goin' around with a big gigantic box of Vay-li-um tablets, and about every five minutes he's walkin' around and poppin' one into his mouth.' Harold âthe Runt' Runtsky had been a friend of mine through the four years at the BMS, A short, stocky product of two red-hot psychoanalysts, the Runt seemed to have had something analyzed out of him, and although he was as smart as anyone in the class, he'd been left shy and quiet, with a little too much slack in his strings, a reactive rather than an active guy, his raucous laugh usually being at someone else's jokes. The Runt had trouble standing up to women sexually. Saddled all through BMS with a roommate who was the most promiscuous guy in the class and who allowed him at times to peek through the keyhole at what was going on, the Runt had gotten into âtwo-dimensional' sex, magazines and movies. After much prodding, shortly before the internship he'd begun a relationship with an intellectual poet named June. The poems were sexless, asensual, bone-dry.
The Runt looked defused. His mustache drooped. As he sat down, he took out a pillbox, put a pill on his hamburger, and munched it down. When I asked what it was, he said, âValium, Vitamin V. I've never been so nervous in my life.'
âWere you on call last night?'
âNope. Tonight. Hooper was on call last night.'
When I asked Hooper how it had been, he got that same gleam in his eye that he'd gotten at the B-M Deli when the Pearl told the story about doing the autopsy in secret, and he giggled and said, âGreat, just great. Two deaths. One permission for the postmortem. Watched it myself this morning. Fantastic.'
âDoes the Valium help?' Potts asked the Runt.
âIt makes me feel kinda sleepy, but I feel pretty unflappable. I'm writing orders for it for all my patients.'
âWhat?' I asked. âYou're putting them on Valium too?'
âWhy not? They're all very nervous, having me as their doc. By the way, Potts, thanks a lot for that transfer last night, the Yellow Man,' said the Runt sarcastically. âTerrific.'
âI'm sorry,' said Potts, âI should have given him the steroids. Has he stopped convulsing?'
âNope. Not yet.'
I got beeped to go back to the ward, and as I left I asked Eat My Dust how it was going for him.
âHow's it going? Compared to California, it sucks.'
When the Rokitansky girls asked to speak with me again, I felt grand. Their hearing aids turned up full blast, they asked for the latest bulletin from âour brother's doctor.' I felt like I was in command, like I had something to give. They hung on my every word. When my beeper called me away, they said they were sorry they'd bothered me and that I must have more important things to do, and as I left them to go down to my first Outpatient Clinic, I felt a real thrill. When I stepped into the elevator, people looked at me, tried to read my name tag, knowing I was a doc. I was proud of my stethoscope, of the blood on my sleeve. The Fat Man was a burnt-out case. Being a doc was a thrill. You could do things for people. They had faith in you. You couldn't let them down. Rokitansky would get well.
Cocky, seduced by the illusion of somehow getting Rokitansky to regenerate his brain, I entered the Outpatient Clinic. Chuck and I had our Clinics on the same day, and, side by side, listened as the Clinic was explained. We'd be functioning just like General Practitioners, except we wouldn't get paid. We each were given an office, to use once every two weeks. The final seduction was when they presented each of us with our cards:
ROY G. BASCH, M.D.. OUTPATIENT CLINIC, HOUSE OF GOD.
Bolstered by pride, pretending to know what I was doing, I waded through my first Clinic. Too poor to afford a House Private, Clinic patients would turn out to be of two types: fifty-two-year-old husbandless black mothers with high blood pressure, and seventy-two-year-old husbandless Jewish LOLs in NAD with high blood pressure. I would hardly ever see a male, and to see someone below the age of fifty-two, except for âmental disturbance' or venereal disease, would be publishable. My first very own patient was a LOL in NAD in need of a checkup and a prescription for a new artificial breast and padded bra with fillable pockets. Who knew how to write a prescription? Not me. She wrote it, I signed it, and, grateful, she left. Next was a Portuguese woman who wanted me to do something about her corns. Who knew about corns? I toyed with the idea of writing her a prescription for an artificial foot and a padded shoe with fillable socks, but then I remembered the Fat Man and TURFED her to Podiatry. The next LOL in NAD was seventy-five, Jewish, and came in with her upper eyelids Scotch-taped to her forehead. Reading her old chart, I found out that this was a case of âdrooping lids of unknown etiology' and that her previous Clinic tern had TURFED her to Ophthalmology, where the resident had told her to âtape them up or I operate' and she'd chosen the tape and had been TURFED back to Medicine. This was a BOUNCE.
âOh, I love meeting all you nice young doctors,' she said.
âHow long have you had this tape on your lids?'
âEight years. How much longer do I have to wear it?'
âWhat happens if you take it off?'
âMy eyelids fall down.'
I wrote her a prescription for more tape. She grasped my hand and began to chatter about how glad she was to have me as her doctor. It was hard for me to listen because her taped-up lids made her eyes bulge out like a monster of the deep, and the only thing that stopped her life story from pouring out was that the nurse brought in my next patient, the last of the afternoon. This was a hypertensive black woman of fifty-four named Mae, with no chief complaint except âmy joints hurt when I play basketball with my kids' and a request for a pelvic exam. When she was up in the stirrups Mae started spouting Jehovah's Witness gospel, and after she got dressed, chattering all the while a mixture of religion, family history, and history of her previous terns at the House Clinic, she spewed out some Witness pamphlets and left. These women loved coming to the doctor. I walked into Chuck's office and found him with a LOL in NAD too. He was doing something I'd never seen done before in medicine, something with a tape measure and a breast.
âWell, you see, man, this lady says her breast is growing.'
âJust one of them?'
âRight. So I thought I'd better measure and see if it gets any bigger in the next two weeks.'
Back on the ward, I felt grand, I was excited, thrilled at being a doctor. Having been a red-hot in my academic career, there was no reason not to be a House red-hot too. Hadn't the Pearl himself, earlier in the day, congratulated me on the way I'd cleaned out his patient for the bowel run? Feeling Dr. Kildarish, I sat in the warm sunlight of the nursing station. Looking into the room across the hallway, I saw Molly, perky transparent Molly, bending over the bed, fiddling with the sheet. She kept her legs straight, so her miniskirt rode up her thighs, and with a final reach over to the far side of the bed, she hiked the hem up over her ass, showering me with the rainbow-and-flower pattern of her little-girl panties, snug against the firm full gluteal folds that formed an awning over the juicy female thing that grew up there. I could feel a half-chub mumbling and squirming in my whites.
âThat's the straight bendover.' It was the Fat Man. He sat down beside me, unrolling the
Journal
.
âHuh?'
âThat nursing maneuver, where they bend from the waist and flash their ass. Called the Straight Bendover Nursing Maneuver. Learn it in nursing school. What are you going to do about TURFING Sophie? She's settling in, and I'm warning you, she's really getting Putzeled this time. She could be here for months.'
âPutzeled?'
âBob Putzel, her Private, remember? He uses the standard method: admit the LOL in NAD, do a test, produce a complication, do another test to diagnose the complication, get another complication, and so on until they're gomertose and non-TURFABLE. Do you want that nice LOL in NAD to become an Ina Goober? Nip it in the bud. Do something now. You gotta get her to leave.'
âHow?'
âDo a painful procedure. She doesn't like painful procedures.'
âI can't think of anything that's indicated.
âOh. Well, she has a headache, and her noon temp is a degree high. No matter that it's almost a hundred Fahrenheit up here and all the temps are a degree high, no matter, âcause the chart is BUFFED with a recorded noon temp a degree high. Oh, and she has a stiff neck too. So: headache, fever, stiff neck; diagnosis?'
âMeningitis.'
âProcedure?'
âLumbar puncture, LP. But she doesn't really have meningitis.'
âShe might. If you don't LP her, you might miss it, like Potts missed with Mellow Yellow. And don't worry about hurting Sophie, she's tough. A Gray Panther. Get Molly to help.' Looking in the paper, Fats mumbled, âThe Dow Jones is up, baby, up. Good. Good climate for the Invention now, for sure.'
âFor what?'
âThe Invention, the Invention! The Great American Medical Invention!'
With the Dow Jones rising up over America's colorful ass, how could I not enjoy doing an LP on Sophie? Molly had never before assisted at an LP and was glad to help. Together we walked into Sophie's room. Levy the Lost, my BMS, was sitting on Sophie's bed Putzeling her hand, âtaking a history.' He was still at the beginning, asking her âWhat brought you to the hospital?'