The Making of a Nurse (27 page)

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Authors: Tilda Shalof

BOOK: The Making of a Nurse
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Recently, quietly one afternoon, the Nurses’ Comfort Quilt was mounted behind glass in the waiting room. It can be found hanging on the wall, in between the window and the fish tank.

*
I didn’t get a chance to tell them about Justine’s famous T-shirts, like the one that reads: “Nurses Call the Shots” imprinted over a scary-looking needle and syringe. Then there was a night she wore one that said, “Institute for the Sexually Gifted” and handed out fake “Virgin Restorer Pills” to the older nurses, who laughed about it until the morning.

*
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, a life-threatening lung injury that requires a long and difficult course of treatment.

*
It is called
ECMO
for extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation.


Magnetic resonance imaging is another type of scan, particularly useful for visualizing the brain.

*
Thus, explaining the missing items from your closet, Ivan, should you happen to read this.

*
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome – a 2003 global epidemic during which thousands became ill and more than eight hundred people died.

11
A NIGHT IN THE LIFE

Sleep, nature’s soft nurse.

– William Shakespeare

E
ven after all these years, I still work night shifts. I probably could find a day job or an excuse to get out of them, but I’m not yet ready to say goodbye to the nights. However, on my evening drive to work along the darkening city streets, I often think about the long night ahead of me (especially about three o’clock in the morning or so, when the jokes begin to run thin or have petered out altogether and fatigue threatens to take over), and I wonder how much longer I will be able to keep this up. As I contemplate the night ahead, I dread that desperate moment that comes at least once, when I’ll have to make a huge leap of faith to believe that the morning will really come.

When I go to work at night, most people I know are settling down for bedtime. I’m out of synch with my family’s schedule. My “weekend” might be in the middle of the week. Friends often complain that they never know when to call me. (Do they think a nurse would allow precious sleep to be interrupted by the telephone? We unplug it or turn off the ringer!) “What’s a typical shift like?” someone asked me recently and since a typical shift might just as likely be a night, I decided to keep a running log. Here goes.

Pre-Night Shift Jitters

My unease dissipates as soon as I arrive and realize once again the hospital at night is a different place. It’s more humble, no longer bustling with self-importance as it is during the day. There are no staff doctors and scientists in suits and white lab coats charging around. The flurry of retail activity has ground to a halt. You encounter far fewer lost and bewildered folks asking for directions to the Endoscopy Suite or Radiation department. We are workers, all of us, no managers or bosses around – all mice, no cats – and there’s a sense of solidarity in the understanding that we will take charge in ways we wouldn’t dare – nor be expected to – during the day. To be sure, some nights are quiet and even offer opportunities to relax. Unless, of course, someone suddenly gets
really
sick.

1900: At the Nurses’ Station

Roberta, the nurse in charge tonight, looks worried. We’re short-staffed, even with Beryl unexpectedly showing up, mistakenly thinking she was scheduled to work. As it turns out, we need her, “But even if we didn’t, I’d keep her here for her own safety,” Roberta mutters. We chuckle because although Beryl is a decent nurse, a journeyman, she’s not the brightest star in the sky. It’s Roberta’s third night in a row, an overtime shift, and no matter how tired she may be, or preoccupied with her personal problems being the family’s sole breadwinner (her husband died of a heart attack a year ago), I’ve never seen her fatigue show, except maybe a little bit, tonight.

(Well, at least it’s not one of those change-the-clock nights at the end of daylight saving time when we “fall back” and end up having to work an extra hour. The union finally managed to get the hospital to pay us for that extra hour. It was only an hour, but no one wanted to be forced to volunteer their services for free, especially for an extra hour of night duty.)

Noreen is pacing outside her patient’s door. She’s the day nurse and wants to get out in time to make it to her daughter’s soccer game. I hotfoot it over there a few minutes early to avoid her wrath. She thanks me and launches straight into the story of the
patient we will share, back and forth, over the next few days and nights. I am listening to her as I glance across the room to Monica, my partner, who gives me a thumbs up to indicate that whatever happens, we’ll deal with it and have a sweet night. “This is Mr. Lee, a sixty-eight-year-old man who came in a week ago in respiratory distress and septic shock,” Noreen introduces the patient to me. “Got him off the Levophed and blood pressure remained stable … his temp stayed down. Extubated this afternoon … chest sounds clear and gases are good … saturations stayed in the nineties all day on forty per cent oxygen by facemask. His urine was about fifteen cc per hour, so I got an order for a diuretic.” She scans the flow sheet where we make our recordings to ensure she hasn’t missed any important details. “He’s a
peach
, so if there’s an admission during the night, he’ll have to be transferred out so that you can take an arrest from the floor or a new admission from emerge. You know how it is.”
I do
.

2000: Initial Assessment

I take the first hour of my shift to examine my patient and learn him organ by organ, from head to toe and inside out. He is uncommunicative, so I try to pick up his energy and sense his personality. I study his “machines” and memorize their numbers, modes, settings, and alarm limits. I lower the lights around his bed and have taken up my seat at the desk just outside the room to read the chart when Jenna, whom I had noticed earlier looking distraught, scoots out of her room, pulls up a chair beside me, and gets right to the point.

“My gynecologist – what a jerk!”

After three years of trying to get pregnant – not that she hasn’t enjoyed that part of it – Jenna now wonders if it’s worth it. The tests, hormone injections, the cost, and the emotional rollercoaster she’s been on – maybe it’s not meant to be? “At the last minute, he cancels my appointment and his secretary reschedules me for tomorrow at eleven o’clock, when I need to sleep after this night shift.”

A thought occurs to me. “Have you ever considered getting off of nights for a while?” I want to ask her, but she has to hurry back to her patient before she has a chance to answer.

I’ve learned how to cope with practically any situation that can arise in the icu, no matter how difficult or stressful, as long as I have a partner I can rely upon and Monica is certainly that. She is an excellent nurse, confident and competent, though bossy and judgmental at times. But Monica has a secret, wild side that not many know about. She was teased about her name during the Monica Lewinsky thing, but it didn’t bother her in the least. “I would have fallen for Clinton, too,” she said shamelessly. She often says she’s prepared to try anything once and thankfully what she tried one year after the
ICU
staff Christmas party happened only once. She came to work hungover and convinced someone to start an iv and give her a litre of fluid and Gravol. She hung the iv on a coat hook in the staff lounge and lay down to sleep it off. Despite her own antics she is quick to find fault with other nurses who behave in a manner of which she disapproves. “We’ve got to get the lazy and overweight nurses dragonboat rowing or start a hockey team,” she often says. She herself is petite, pretty, and keeps herself incredibly buff with a daily 6 a.m. spinning class at the gym. I’ve never seen her eat anything but carrot sticks and protein shakes and she’s always throwing out the boxes of candy that families bring in to thank us and replacing them with fruit. But I admire that as a divorced single mother with a deadbeat ex-husband, working overtime and extra shifts at other hospitals, Monica has raised and supported her daughter all by herself. On top of all that, she’s working toward a Master’s degree in nursing administration. We all predict she’ll go far.

I record my patient’s vital signs, listen to his lungs, give him iv medications, a bath, back rub, and change of linen. With the assistance of Stanislaw, one of our hospital assistants, I reposition him to make him more comfortable. When I wish him a good night, I swear I can see gratitude in his eyes. When I come out of his room, Roberta is making her rounds to see how the patients are and if anyone needs help. She looks a bit tense, so I play my little game with her. “Born to Be Wild,” I toss out and she calls back, “Mars Bonfire, the
Steppenwolf
album,” without missing a beat. Ten years of working with her and none of us has managed to stump her yet.

The phone is ringing at the nurses’ station. “Tilda, pick up line two,” I hear over the intercom. It’s my patient’s wife, asking how he’s doing. “He’s fine. I’ve just gotten him ready to sleep.” I’m pleased to tell her.

“Will he make it? Through the night, I mean?”

“Yes … I think so,” I say cautiously. “Anything can happen, as you know, but I think he’ll have a good night,” I add more reassuringly. There are no guarantees, which is what I suspect she wishes I would offer. I don’t mention the possibility that he may be transferred to the floor during the night if the need arises, but perhaps I should so it won’t come as a surprise if it happens?

“Give him my love,” she says, and I return to my patient and do just that.

2100: Time to Kick Them Out!

The overhead announcement system comes on. “Visiting hours are now over!”

“Remember that sweetie who used to be on the switchboard?” we recall fondly. “How he used to give the weather reports and advice?”

“Whatever happened to him?” someone asks, but no one knows.

Since everything is hunky-dory with my patient, I take up my post just outside his room, where I can keep an eye on everything. Hopefully, he senses I’m there and feels reassured so that he can feel safe and sleep. I sit back and sink into the quiet lull of the early night. When these interludes come, I ride their gentle wave like a dreamy lifeguard, fixing my gaze out at the ocean, scanning the horizon for trouble, always in a state of relaxed vigilance, and ready to spring into action and dive in at a moment’s notice.

“What’s new, Monica?” I ask when she joins me at the desk we share. She’s serious about her studies, but I am aware of certain extra-curricular activities that keep her fairly busy as well.

“I do have a meeting … later on,” she says, looking at my face to assess my reaction.

Ah, yes, I remember. “How’s it going with you-know-who?” I ask, knowing perfectly well the name of the very married surgeon she’s told me about.

“There’s a transplant scheduled, tonight.” She smiles and returns to her charting.

I connect the dots. Roberta had mentioned that an organ donor had been brought in this afternoon, brain-dead after a head-on collision. In the brief window between the harvesting of the organs and their reconnection to the recipient, there might be just enough time for a romantic tryst.

2200: To Stand or to Sit?

I wander over to the nurses’ station to joke around with Roberta, but she’s preoccupied. She’s going over the staffing for tomorrow morning and at the same time receiving updates about a patient in the operating room who is going sour and troubleshooting problems as they come at her from all directions. All twenty-two beds are full tonight with fully ventilated, sick patients, but she’s got the situation completely under control. She pauses to mention that the family of one of our patients has given us forty dollars to order pizza. “It’s really decent of them, considering he’s not doing very well,” she says wryly.

We often enjoy wonderful meals on night shifts. Occasionally we call for a potluck and everyone brings something. It used to be pasta salads, sausage rolls, and macaroni and cheese, but over time, we have become more diverse and sophisticated. We now have Philippino noodles called
pansit
, Greek
dolmades
with lemon sauce, Indian
samosas
with tamarind chutney, and Jamaican
rotis
. Tonight, I see only a dismal bag of stale jujubes on the desk, but Oscar, a nurse originally from Guyana, tells us he has brought in a big pot of “cook-up” – a rice dish. “It’s in the staff lounge, help yourselves,” he says. “But it may be too spicy for you Joneses and Smiths,” he warns with a grin.

We’ve celebrated many birthdays, weddings, and baby showers together. There are always notices plastered all around the walls of the ICU, and not just for these social events, but also for workshops, conferences, or information about new tools and technology. There are always a few posted on the inside of the door in each bathroom. Presumably, they are placed there because the majority of the readers are female and, therefore, face the door. I postulate that
gender equality will have been achieved in nursing when there are an equal number of notices on the wall behind the toilet seat as there are facing the toilet!

2210: A Critical Call

Someone, somewhere is very sick and needs to come to us. “How are we for beds?” I assume the resident is asking Roberta on the phone because she answers, “Beds? Plenty of ’em! It’s nurses we’re short of.” She rolls her eyes and covers the receiver. “Why don’t people get this? We need more nurses, not furniture.” Roberta looks at the list of patients’ names and the list of nurses’ names and thinks out loud. “I’ll have to double up two patients, prepare the rooms for the liver and a lung transplant coming out of the
OR
, and move a few people around, but it sounds like this patient needs to come here.” She hangs up the phone and I follow after her to give her a hand preparing the room for the new admission. “At least you won’t have to be on standby to transfer your patient out after all, Tilda,” Roberta says.

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