Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Up the Stairs

Saturday night. 9:30. A half an hour before I get off after a 16 hour shift. It’s the worst time to get a call. Another fifteen minutes later and my relief would be in and he’d take it, but at 9:30, no such luck. I am definitely getting off late.

The call is for a fall, a man in his thirties, tumbled down the stairs and has back pain. No loss of consciousness. My partner and I discuss what it is likely to be.

“I just know it,” I say. “It’s going to be a large person. And he’s going to be at the bottom of the basement stairs, and we’re going to have to board him and carry him up the stairs.”

“Maybe he’ll have already walked up the stairs for us.”

“Please, please let that be the case,” I say.

We park in the road and wheel the stretcher up the driveway, and then leave the stretcher out front and walk up the four granite steps. The front door is partway open. I am so hoping to see someone sitting on the bottom step or in the chair by the door. No one. Damn!

I look for the basement stairs, but then hear a voice. “Up here!”

Upstairs?

We walk on up and find our patient sitting on the bed, holding his back and grimacing.

“Let me get this straight,” I say after hearing the patient’s description of the event. “You fell all the way down the stairs, lay there in pain for twenty minutes, and then got up and walked all the way back upstairs to call us.”

He nods, not getting the irony. “That’s right.”

I palpate his spine. He winces as I touch the thoracic area.

No way around this. I explain what we are going to do, and then leave, and then come back with the board, collar, straps and head bed.

The patient is six-four, two hundred and forty pounds. Fortunately my partner Josh is strong and the two of us manage. With a police officer keeping his hand on my back, I also balance myself by leaning my left shoulder against the side wall, as I step backwards down the stairs. I grit my teeth and repeat the mantra, don't let go, don't let go. We carry him all the way down, and out the door and down the four granite steps, to the stretcher.

When I do these carrydowns, as my arms start to tremble and my back strains, I always wonder how smaller crews manage, and I also think how easy it would be to lose your balance or let go from the strain, and with all the improvements over the years with slide sheets and tractor wheel stair chairs and power stretchers, there has to be a better way to carry people up and down stairs on backboards.

I end up giving him 5 mg of morphine for the pain ( I probably should have done it in the house) -- at least it seems to take the edge off for him. So now in addition to writing up my run form, I have go to the pharmacy and exchange controlled substances kits.

On the way back to the base, my partner says, “Maybe he’ll walk up the stairs. Your prayers are answered.”

“Don’t even start,” I say.

I punch out at 11:10. 

Monday, April 12, 2010

Youth

 The mat outside the apartment door says “Coors Country.” Inside the door there are two empty cases of beer; Bud Light and Heinekin. There are two plastic garbage bags tied up and ready to be taken down to the parking lot dumpster. Straight ahead there is an open kitchen with a bar counter. Lined up on the bar are at least ten bottles of booze – all 5ths. Captain Morgan, Bacardi, Jack Daniels, something Mojito. There is also a very large mug, three quarters full with stale beer. There are more bottles lined up on top of the kitchen cabinet – all empty, along with several other 24 packs of beer, which appear full -- ready for another party.

There is a movie poster on the wall – Scarface.

To the right is the living room, which is quite spare. There is a giant plasma TV on the wall, a coffee table and a long couch. There is also an idle vacuum cleaner on the plush white carpet. A police officer stands facing the couch where a young man sits, head in arms, crying.

Another police officer directs me to the bedroom. The roommate is on the bed. The story seems to be, he crashed last night after some heavy drinking. Flopped face down on his pillow, his right arm hanging off the bedside, his knuckles on the floor. His friend let him sleep through the day, and then when the sun went down, the friend finally shook him to get him to wake up, and when he wouldn’t wake up, he rolled him over.

The roommate lays on his back now, his right arm sticking straight up to the ceiling.

I copy down the information from the driver’s license the officer gives me. Out-of-state student. Handsome young man.

One phone call I wouldn’t want to have to answer.

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Katherine Ann

                                                                         Down the corridor

Jason straddles the gurney,
thumbs on her sternum.


Only these fingertips
hold the mask against her skin,
her head in my hands.