Friday, May 24, 2013

A True Hero: For Kathy

Exactly three months from today I hope to wake up a "free woman." PA school will be a thing of my past. The last 27 months of my life will be a warm, chaotic memory and one that I will rather gleefully move on from. But it's not an experience I'll soon forget and if anyone were to ask me, "Would you do it all again? Would you go back to school knowing what you know now and how tough it would be?" I would answer, without hesitation, "Absolutely."

Such was the response that encouraged me to go back to school in my early 30s. When I asked a PA I really respected what he thought of PA school he told me, "It was two of the hardest years of my life... and ones that I would gladly repeat."  

I am fortunate to have many influential people in my life and I want to take this space to thank one of them. 

Waking up Here. By Laura Robinson 

I was rather ill a few years ago. I was in the hospital with an immune system melt down, had lost a lot of weight rather quickly, and was sicker than I ever thought possible. Friends, family, and my partner were all very supportive. They were sweet and continued to tell me I "looked great"--even though I knew I was a frightening shadow of my former self. They told me things would "get better". At the same time that I was in the hospital, my grandfather was also dealing with a renewed bout of cancer. We had a very candid talk at the time about what it means to be sick, to not feel like yourself anymore, about wanting to give up. We talked about how exhausting it was to try and be strong for family, for those who continued to show up. It was during a particularly depressing night, after one of the most difficult days of my life, that a woman named Kathy arrived at my bedside. 

Kathy was a CNA (certified nursing assistant) and I'd never met her before. The other nurses caring for me were excellent. They were young and funny and my room became a happening social phenomenon where nurses would stop by and hang out after their shifts because I always had friends around who were equally young and funny. All of the attention was wonderful, but I was so tired and what I really wanted to talk about, with someone--anyone--was the one thing I was having the hardest time dealing with myself. 

I was afraid. At the time I was a freelance writer and photographer and didn't have health insurance. I was afraid I wouldn't get better, that things wouldn't be okay. Kathy had just gone through a difficult medical dilemma with a close family member who eventually ended up passing away. She'd heard about me and wanted to say hello because I was the youngest person on the floor. When you work in the hospital you usually work with older people so a patient in their 20s or 30s is unique. For someone that young to be in the hospital they are often very sick. Kathy arrived at 10pm, a whisper in the moonlight, and sat down beside me and asked me the question I was craving that someone would ask: "Are you scared?" My answer was a resounding "YES!" and Kathy stayed with me for several hours letting me vent out all of my fears and frustrations. She gave me the greatest gift she could have: her attention. 

I never saw Kathy again. I was never able to thank her. What I was able to do was make a decision to be someone like Kathy for someone else down the road. When I recovered, when things got better, and I was discharged, I vowed to go back to school someday for medicine or psychology, or both!

As I begin to wade through all of the ideas in my head about where I want to end up practicing medicine, which patient population and perhaps even what specialty, I came across a rather serendipitous opportunity. Last night I was invited to attend the spring fundraiser for Neighborcare--Seattle's largest provider of primary medical and dental care for low income and uninsured families and individuals. Neighborcare is a 40 year old organization with impressive roots in Washington. The event subsequently brought me back to my roots, reminded me of why I decided to pursue medicine in the first place, and reminded me that people like Kathy are the real reason that we heal. There are pills and prescriptions and appointments to keep, and then there is the greatest service we can provide our patients: our attention. 

Thank you, Kathy. You continue to be an inspiration for me as I move forward with these last few months of clinical rotations. I see nothing but opportunity every day to be of service in the same way you were for me years ago. I am proof of the ripples you created with your kindness. 


Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The B Sides

Wheeling a stretcher down a narrow hospital hallway at nearly full speed can be a harrowing, exciting, and somewhat terrifying experience.

Especially for the patient on the stretcher.

The OR (operating room) suites--all 20 of them--are eerily quiet on my last weekend in neurosurgery. Those of us on call cool our heels not hoping (hoping?) for an "emergency" surgery. These are the ones, as a student, you somewhat cut your teeth on. Because they can happen at anytime, at all hours of the night, and the learning opportunity is enormous. The last major surgery I took part in during my neurosurgery rotation happened to be an "emergency" surgery, and I was on call.

The only post-operative recovery room on a Saturday at one of Seattle's largest hospitals is the "B room", so we maneuver the large unwieldy stretcher to "The B Side," which is what I've come to call it. Like so many names in medicine it sounds like a band name, The B Sides.

For "brain surgery" it was, for all intents and purposes, an easy operation. A month prior, I would have thought that no brain surgery is "easy". The patient arrived in the emergency room on Friday night, I did her intake and exam myself. She was feeling fine other than a complaint of "the worst headache of my life." As students, these exact words cause our ears to prick up. Could it be, I wondered? Nah...

After a CT scan was done, my suspicions were correct. It was eerily obvious from the image we acquired of the patient's brain that a healthy amount of new and old blood was occupying nearly the entire left side of her head. The patient had fallen a few weeks before, hit her head, and suffered a subdural hematoma, a brain bleed. Blood was continuing to bleed into her skull and as this blood built up she finally began to have symptoms, like her horrible headache.


A subdural hematoma can be handled in a pretty straightforward procedure where the surgeon puts in a few "burr holes" (yup, just like a drill) that then allows the stagnant blood from the bleed to drain. It's, literally, a quick in an out procedure, and from the few I've helped with, the surgeon is all wrapped up in less than an hour.

Of course, not everything always goes as planned. A patient, for example, may have a difficult time waking up from anesthesia, he or she may have some brain lability as the tissues expands back into the space that was taken up by the blood. If the bleed happens on the left side of the noggin the left side of the brain then "bounces back" after the blood is removed and this person may wake up with "aphasia" or a problem finding words. If the bleed happens on the right, they may wake up with some motor or movement abnormalities. Much of this is to be expected. Much of this should go away. But, oh, the moments when the human body surprises me is precisely why I have come to adore and also bow down to the enigma of all that is flesh and bone.

Human bodies often do exactly as you would expect. People come out of anesthesia just fine. They get hurt and they heal. There are band aids for cuts, aspirin for fevers, and burr holes for brain bleeds. But sometime the body does exactly the opposite. And you are left with a mystery, a moment of uncertainty and concern, a test of everything you have ever learned, an opportunity to see how fast one can do extensive medical research online to find a next step, a solution, a new potion. There are the moments when the body does, quite literally, fail to follow through. And that is what happened with my patient that day.

Tonight I begin my 4 week rotation in the Emergency Department, or ER, of a large hospital in the PNW--in fact its the busiest ER in all of Washington State. I hear the place is as big as "a football field", has over 100 beds, and I am nervous. I have classically been the most vasovagal person I know--in other words, I'm a fainter. Years ago, the sight of blood would surely do it, but as recently as a year ago, simple stories of bleeding would quicken my heart rate, turn my hands sweaty and put that nauseous feeling in the back of my throat. Watching someone suture up a laceration put me in a tailspin where I had to sit down. In fact, even the thought of suturing! But, my surgery rotations changed all that, or did they? 

Surgery is elaborately deliberate. There is a system to surgery. A protocol. There is a sterile field and patient preparation and draping and deliberation before the inside of a human body is exposed. There is a chance to get to know a patient before they end up on the table. The privilege of knowing and appreciating a personality. In neurosurgery especially, this was often more critical than the operation itself. Does the patient have more motor deficit after surgery? Does their personality seem altered? Are they acting "funny" and do we need to be concerned? After all, its a brain we are talking about. For the patient mentioned above, the one with the subdural hematoma, knowing the patient's history and personality beforehand likely saved valuable time when it was noted that the patient was not recovering from the operation as expected. It was painfully obvious to anyone who had met this patient that they were not the same person when they came out of surgery, and wouldn't be for nearly a day. 

~

I've worked as a graveyard shift and swing shift supervisor in the largest non-profit detox and substance abuse center in Denver, CO. I've been in the middle of extreme chaos. I know I can handle many things going on at once. I know I can verbally de-escalate men much larger and much angrier than I'll ever see and women in the throes of hysterics (and large, angry women and men in the throes of hysterics!) I know exactly how much I can do before I know I can't do anymore. I know my limits. I know it's true: that full moons, Friday nights, and sometimes early Monday mornings (after a long weekend) are often the busiest in a crisis center like a detox, or an emergency department. And I've  had more than a handful of experiences already in several ER's during my rotations that I know I'm in for some fun, some fright, a few firsts, and perhaps, most importantly, some personal growth. I think my preceptor is going to be a big part of that. He already told me he won't allow me to work every day (something I've often tried to do) and that I'm only to work 4 days a week. His words: You will work hard and it will be challenging. But a big part of learning medicine is learning how to take care of your self and your loved ones. He'll probably never know how timely that advice could arrive.

Photograph courtesy of Stephen Hatch: http://www.StephenHatchPhotography.com
Will I be able to handle the surprises? Will I faint? Only time will tell...

Wishing a lovely Wednesday afternoon to you all. If you get injured, please come see me in the ER. I'll do my darnedest to help you and when I run out of ideas I'll go find someone else. Because of my experience working in detox, I now follow the moons. We are currently in the first quarter of a new moon cycle. Perfect for beginnings. Tonight the moon is waxing crescent heading towards a full moon on the 24th, which by the way, is a Friday. Full moon Friday?

Don't worry, I already asked to work it.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

The Wind Riders


We are back on campus this week so the only crazy medical stories are the ones my other 45 or so classmates and I share with one another. But, I was inspired recently by the birth of spring around me. There is nowhere quite like the Pacific Northwest in springtime. It is a wild, and reckless springtime. I think us humans feel a bit wild and reckless ourselves as we bloom right along with the world around us. This one is for LJ. 





I notice them now
arriving, listless in the nights,
scattering in the mornings, bending
on the wind, getting caught up
in the window screens, their small
orange bodies a tangle
of movement,
there are hundreds.

Where is the mother of all of these children?
Awakening from her own winter? Where she
filled the cracks in the floorboards
with her own slender legs?

Her babies will grow, through the heat and rain of summer,
through to fall, where they will collapse
greedily, into our shared space.
They’ll appear in troves,
as big as coins, shocking in their glory,
so delicate and quick.

The dawn will bring a fortress weaved of the backyard,
between hydrangea and pine, between
an old wooden ladder and
a favorite chair. And I will stand still
and silent each day
navigating the best path.

This year, I decide to grow with them,
exsanguinate life from the night, elicit a lucid, quaking
calm from the day. Knowing each moment a marker
in a short span of time. After all,
we share a growth cycle,
the wind riders and I,
even as I watch them now,
bending, individual
glistening
whispering drops

of sunlight.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Ten Thousandth Hour


A very good friend of mine once told me: “If you don’t know where to start, just start where you are.”


And so I’m going to start with my ride home from another day of practicing neurosurgery. Today was a 13-hour day, in a string of 10+ hour days, and the day’s end found me walking through downtown Seattle at 9pm with a grin. I gathered quite a few stares with my attire: cowboy(girl) boots, aqua scrubs, and an outdoor coat from REI. It was as if all of the fractured parts of a personality—my personality—were finally coming together. The animal lover, the outdoor adventurer, and the medical nerd.

I’ve spent time thinking about how someone gets good at something, like really good. I’ve heard that it takes upwards of 10,000 hours to sufficiently retain a unique and demanding skill and declare oneself somewhat of an “expert” at it. I’ve heard that a Buddhist monk will spend 10,000 hours in silent meditation before he or she feels they can adequately meditate. I’ve thought about that kind of discipline and whether or not I would find something I could–-or would want to—dedicate that much of my own precious life to. 

That was years ago. Now, I know I could spend years perfecting lightweight backpacking, long distance running, mountain viewing, meditating, writing, philosophizing. But…nothing has seemed to satisfy my interest, curiosity, and instill such a unique personal challenge quite like medicine.  

That same friend who told me to start where I am also told me to quit while I’m ahead. With another long day of surgery tomorrow and my last few days of this rotation drawing near, I’m going to heed that advice.

Only 9,999 hours to go...