โTell me about your last admission,โ Alyssa says to me.
The Code Blue is over. The patient was intubated and swept off to the ICU in critical but stable condition. Heโs not dead is all I know. Now weโre sitting on 3-South, my popsicle is long gone, and Iโm starving. But at least Iโm not tired and I donโt have to pee. I figure Iโm always going to be ignoring at least one of my bodyโs needs.
โOkay,โ I say. I fumble in my white coat pocket for my notes, but then I remember how Alyssa hates it when Iย readย my notes, so I decide to wing it. โMrs. Washington is a 59-year-old female whoโโ
โWho?โ
I hesitate. Crap, wrong President. This wouldnโt have happened if Alyssa would let me read my notes when I present to her. โI mean, Mrs.ย Jeffersonย is a 59-year-old female whoโโ
โDonโt say โfemale,โโ Alyssa interrupts me. โHuh?โ
โWhen you call her a โfemale,โ what do you mean by that? What is sheโa female dog? A female horse?โ
I stare at Alyssa. โNo, sheโs a female human.โ โRight, and whatโs the word for that?โ
I bite my lip. Is this a trick question? Alyssa rolls her eyes. โAย woman, right?โ โOh. Right.โ
Alyssa sighs. โGo ahead.โ
โUm,โ I say. โMrs. Jefferson is a 59-year-oldย womanย whoโโ
Apparently, Iโm not destined to say anything more than that first half-sentence because thatโs when Alyssaโs pager goes off. She goes to answer it, eying me like I might scurry off if sheโs not careful. As if Iโd have the courage to walk away from Alyssa.
I donโt know what this phone call is about, but itโs not from the ER and itโs upsetting her even more than my calling Mrs. Jefferson a female. โHow much?โ she barks into the phone. โNo, youโre right, thatย isย a
lot. Absolutely, I agree. No more than that. My intern will go talk to him.โ
Alyssa slams down the phone. โJane,โ she says. โYou are giving Mr.
Chandlerย wayย too much narcotics. Weโre cutting him off right now.โ
โHeโs in pain though,โ I protest. โDonโt we have to treat his pain?โ โIโm not going to sit here and argue with you, Jane,โ she says. โGo
talk to him and tell him to stop bothering the nurses for pain meds. He can have whatโs already prescribed, nothing more.โ
โBut what about Mrs. Jackson?โ I ask. โWho?โ
Crap, wrong President. Again.
โI mean, Mrs. Jefferson,โ I correct myself.
โNo, you need to go take care of Chandler right now,โ Alyssa says. โHeโs giving the nurses hell.โ
I canโt even imagine such a thing. Iโm beginning to get familiar with the nurses on that unit and they tend to be a bit lazy. I can imagine that theyโre sick of fetching pain meds for Mr. Chandler, so their solution is to call him a baby and rat him out to my superior. Still, Iโve got to do what Alyssa says.
When I reach Alex Chandlerโs room, heโs got the lights out again and heโs watching television. He shuts it off when I enter the room. He flashes me the tiniest of smiles as I gown up to go inside.
โDid I get you in trouble?โ he asks.
โNo,โ I lie. โButโฆ I think we have to cut back on the pain meds. A little.โ
Alex nods. โThatโs okay. Iโฆ I think I can get through it.โ This is the guy that was giving the nurses hell? Seriously?
โIโm just kind of itchy,โ he says, shrugging helplessly. โLike, all over. Do you think you Benadryl might help for that?โ
โI can give you Benadryl,โ I say, thrilled to be able to offer him something that isnโt a controlled substance.
โThanks,โ he says. And he just seemsย soย grateful. โNo problem,โ I say.
I canโt help but imagine what it would be like to have the dumb bad luck Alex Chandler had, end up with an incurable disease, then find myself in the hospital and in pain. I know Iโd want my doctor to be nice to me.
I get paged practically the second I sit down in the cafeteria for dinner with Nina and a few other interns. I look down at my tray of food. I havenโt eaten since breakfast, so I bought food with that in mind. Iโve got fried chicken, rice, mashed potatoes, a garlic roll, and a big bottle of Diet Coke. On top of that, I bought two huge bags of chips. By the end
of my intern year, Iโm going to be as big as Mrs. Lincoln. I mean, Mrs. Jefferson.
I return the page from my cell phone, even though the reception is spotty. I just donโt have the energy to get up. I hear Alyssaโs voice on the other line, which is almost enough to make me lose my appetite. Almost. โIโve got your third admission for you,โ she says. โCome meet me in
the resident lounge.โ
โCanโt you just tell me about him over the phone?โ I ask. Alyssa doesnโt say anything.
โBecause I was about to eat dinnerโฆโ I begin. Then I realize this line of argument is pointless. Alyssa doesnโt believe in eating. โOkay, Iโll be right there.โ
โWho was that?โ Nina asks me.
โAlyssa,โ I say. โShe wants me to come to the resident lounge right now.โ
Ninaโs eyes widen. โNo. Jane, you are going to eat your dinner. I am not going to allow you to leave this table before you eat at least one drumstick and fiveโฆ no,ย eightย bites of mashed potatoes. Eat your food, young lady.โ
I smile gratefully at Nina. Sheโs rightโAlyssa can wait. After all, sheโs going to be pissed off at me no matter what. I may as well eat.
I proceed to shove food into my throat so rapidly that I feel like Iโm in one of those contests where theyโre trying to see who can eat fifty hot dogs faster, a man or a bear. (The bear always wins because it doesnโt need to chew.) I swallow half my cola in one gulp, grab my two bags of chips, and hurry down to the resident lounge.
Iโm already bracing myself to get chewed out by Alyssa, but when I get to the lounge, sheโs on the phone. Sheโs got her cell phone pressed against her ear and sheโs actually smiling a little. I didnโt even know her facial muscles were capable of doing that.
โI love you, sweetie,โ she coos into the phone. โI love you so much. I love you more than the moon and the stars and the planets and the whole universe.โ
Oh God. I definitely wouldnโt have pegged Alyssa as the kind of girlfriend who got mushy on the phone. Next thing sheโs going to start calling her boyfriend pet names like โschmoopy.โ This is nauseating to listen to. Especially after the way S*xy Surgeon rejected me the other night. Nobody will ever callย meย schmoopy.
โGood night, sweetie,โ she says into the phone. โMommy will see you tomorrow.โ
Mommy?
Alyssaโs a mom? I didnโt even realize she was married yet.
She makes kissing noises into the phone, then hangs up. I stare at her, totally shocked by what I just heard. โI didnโt realize you had a kid,โ I say.
โYes,โ she says. โHeโs 2O months old.โ
She doesnโt offer me any more information, including his name, and her tone doesnโt invite questions. But I realize if her kid is 2O months old, that means she had a baby when she was an intern. I look down at my abdomen and imagine what this would be like if I were pregnant right now. I shudder.
โWhat took you so long?โ Alyssa asks me.
I donโt dare tell her I was eating my dinner. I try to come up with something else reasonable I could have been doing. โSomething came up with a patient,โ I lie.
โWhat?โ
โNothing important,โ I mumble.
Alyssa eyes the two bags of chips in my hands. She knows Iโm lying, but thankfully, she doesnโt press the matter further. That kid of hers is in for a rough childhood, thatโs all Iโve got to say.
โBy the way,โ she says. โWeโve got to discuss your days off.โ
My heart leaps. All residents are required to get at least four days off per month. I say โat leastโ because you could potentially get more days off, but the chances of that are pretty small. Still, Iโd been worried that Alyssa wasnโt even planning on giving me my four days and that Iโd just be working for 31 days straight.
She pulls out a calendar for the month. The options for days off are somewhat limited on our cycle of having overnight call every four days. We canโt be off on our call days obviously, and the next day (the post- call days) are off-limits as well. The day after our post-call day, we have โshort callโ which means we can admit patients until 1 p.m. if itโs a weekday. The next day is the โpre-callโ day, which is the only day that can potentially be taken off.
Alyssa has circled all the pre-call days. Under some of them, she has written โConnie/Janeโ and others she has written โAlyssa.โ I count the โConnie/Janeโ days and see there are exactly four and exactly four โAlyssaโ days. โThese are your days off,โ she says.
I notice thereโs one day thatโs circled as a potential day off but hasnโt been assigned to anyone. โWhat about that day?โ I ask her. โThat could be a day off, right?โ
Alyssa glares at me. โYou know, if you get an extra day off, that means that your resident and your attending have to do your workย forย you. Does that seem fair?โ
I swallow and think of Alyssa cooing to her son on the phone. โWell,ย youย could take the day off.โ
She hesitates a moment, as if sheโs almost considering it. I want her to take the day off. Not so much so that she could be with her son, but because right now, a day off from Alyssa seems almost as good as a day off from work. But then she shakes her head angrily. โNo,โ she says. โItโs more fair this way.โ
Your loss, Alyssa.
โOkay,โ she says, โlet me tell you about your next patient.โ
I nod and grab for my notes from my white coat pocket. And thatโs when I realize that my notes are gone. All the notes and paperwork I have from the patients Iโve seen today and will be covering on call have inexplicably vanished. My stomach sinks.
โWhat are you waiting for?โ Alyssa asks, glaring at me impatiently.
She looks down at her watch.
I canโt tell her that I lost all my notes. Not only do I need those notes to get through the call, but the notes have private patient information on them. Alyssa will murder me if I tell her I lost them. She will literally pick me up and toss me through the window like a rag doll.
So instead I clear my throat and force a smile. โI just ran out of paper,โ I say.
I hop up and grab a yellowing paper from tray of the perpetually out-of-order printer and sit down across from Alyssa, poised to take notes as quickly as possible and then go find my lost papers.
โBy the way,โ Alyssa says, โcan I take a look at the med list on Chandler?โ
Crap. Does she know? Can she read my mind? โUm,โ I say. โI left itโฆ in my locker.โ
Alyssa narrows her eyes. โWhy on earth would you do that?โ I swallow. โSo I wouldnโt lose it.โ
Alyssa must smell blood, but she just shakes her head at me and doesnโt press me further. Thank God.
As soon as Alyssa finishes telling me about the new patient, I am off like a rocket. My first stop is the cafeteria, where against all odds, Nina is still eating lunch. She has a nice life.
โHey!โ she says cheerfully. โBack for seconds?โ
I wish. โNina,โ I say. โWhen I was sitting here, did you notice if I had some white papers with me?โ
โOh sure,โ she says, grinning at me. โYou donโt forget a thing like that.โ
โThis is serious,โ I say. Iโm getting close to tears. โThose were all the notes on my patients and now I canโt find them.โ
Nina is frustratingly unperturbed. โWell, just retrace your steps.
Where have you been today?โ
โEverywhere!โ I cry. I really have. Iโve been to every unit of the hospital as well as to the Emergency Room.
โWell, where did you see them last?โ โI donโt know!โ
Nina wipes her mouth off with a napkin, and struggles to her feet. โOkay, come on. Iโll help you look.โ
I have officially started to panic though. I keep thinking about all that patient information, open for anyone to find. Like Mr. Chandlerโs HIV status. I could go toย jailย for this. Although, in all honestly, jail might be slightly preferable to my current situation.
Iโm already picturing how Iโd look in an orange prison jumpsuit when I nearly collide with a janitor who is wheeling a large trash receptacle down the hallway. I look down into the trash and I canโt even believe my eyes: itโs my notes!
โThatโs mine!โ I scream, pointing at the slightly soiled papers wedged between a banana peel and a bunch of crumpled up paper towels. I reach into the trash and carefully extract it with my thumb and forefinger, trying my best not to touch anything else. The notes are stained but intact. โWhere did you find it?โ
The janitor looks from the papers to my face. โEn el cuarto del baรฑo,โ he says.
Iโm attempting to access my high school Spanish when Nina speaks up: โYou left it in the bathroom.โ
Wow. I didnโt even realize Iโd been to the bathroom today.
Hours Awake: 12
Chance of doing something else dumb in the next 18 hours: 11O%