An hour later, Iโve ordered the golden work-up for Mr. Petrovich. Heโs being admitted to our service to rule out a heart attack, and if heโs not actively infarcting his heart, heโll get a stress test in the morning. I have no idea how theyโre going to explain to him what to do on the treadmill, but thatโs their problem.
I page Alyssa to go over the patient with me. She says sheโs back in the resident lounge, and I have to wonder if sheโs been there the whole time with Connie, discussing wedding rings. Itโs probably bad form to ask.
On my way to the lounge, I get a page and my stomach sinks. As part of my overnight call, Iโm cross-covering the whole hospital. That means that if thereโs any problem with any patient in the hospital, Iโm the gal whoโs supposed to solve it. Itโs kind of cool. And by โcool,โ I obviously mean itโs completely terrifying and I want to curl up in a corner and hide under a big pile of coats.
Thereโs a phone in the resident lounge, so I figure I can call back from there. I see Alyssa inside, sitting on the couch, waiting for me. Her legs and arms are both crossed.
โI have to return a page,โ I explain. She nods. Iโve already displeased her.
I dial the number on my pager. โHello, this is โDoctorโ McGill,โ I
say.
I really need to stop doing those scare quotes.
โHello, โDoctor.โ This is Jill on 3-South. Iโm calling about the
patient in Room 321A, Mr. Benson.โ
โOh,โ I say. I did get a sign-out on this patient, which I stuffed in my pocket. I pull out a bunch of papers from my pocket and start rifling through them. โWhatโs the problem?โ
โWe just checked his blood sugar,โ Jill says. โAnd itโs 59.โ โOh,โ I say.
โWhat would you like to do, โDoctorโ?โ Jill asks me.
โUmโฆโ I look up at Alyssa, who is actively glaring at me right now. โCould we give him some orange juice?โ
โHeโs NPO for a biopsy,โ Jill explains.
NPO means nothing by mouth. Itโs probably another Latin thing. Anyway, how do you give a guy sugar if he canโt take anything by mouth? Maybe I could give him some in the IV. But the guyโs diabetic so I donโt want to give him too much and send him into a diabetic coma.
โHang on,โ I say to Jill. I cover the receiver of the phone and look up at Alyssa. โUm, this patient has a blood sugar of 59 but heโs NPO. What should I do?โ
Alyssa sighs really loudly. โYou can give him one amp of D5O.โ
I report this back to Jill, who probably knew what to do all along, then we hang up. I try to smile at Alyssa, who isnโt having any of it. She gets out an index card and prepares to take notes.
โWhat are you waiting for?โ she asks me.
โSorry,โ I say. I clear my throat. โMr. Petrovich is a 67-year-old man whoโฆโ
My pager goes off again.
Alyssa looks so unbelievably angry. Seriously, this is not my fault! Iโm getting paged. How can I help it? This is part of my freaking job. I pick up the phone, swearing to myself that Iโm at least going to sound like a real doctor this time. No scare quotes.
โHello, this is โDoctorโ McGill.โ Damn it!
โHello, โDoctor.โ This is Marielle on 4-North. Mrs. Richardson was started on an ADA diet but no calories were specified.โ
I stare at the phone. โAโฆ what? ADA?โ
โA diabetic diet, โDoctor,โโ Marielle clarifies.
โOh.โ Crap. I look up at Alyssa. I can see a vein starting to pulse in her large forehead. Iโm probably going to give her stroke tonight. And I wonโt even know what to do, because Iโm apparently completely incompetent. I brace myself. โAlyssa, this patient was put on an ADA diet, but they need to know how many calories.โ
โIs the patient overweight?โ Alyssa asks. She sees my hesitation and shakes her head. โNever mind. Just tell her 18OO calories.โ
I report back to Marielle and then hang up the phone. Holy crap, this is hard. How am I going to get through the night without having Alyssa chained to my hip? I canโt answerย anyย of these stupid questions. And nobodyโs actually even sick yet.
For a minute, the two of us just sit there, staring at my pager, certain itโs going to go off again. When it doesnโt, I take a deep breath, look down at my notes, and start my presentation once again: โMr. Petrovich
is a 67-year-old man with a history of diabetes and hypertension who presented with substernal chest painโโ
Before I can get any further, I feel the notes being tugged from my hand. I look up and see Alyssaโs angry face.
โStop reading,โ she instructs me. โHuh?โ I say.
โStop reading your notes,โ she repeats. โYou should be able to present the patient to me in your own words, without mumbling and looking down at the paper.โ
โSorry,โ I mumble, looking down at the paper. I start over: โMr.
Petrovich is a 67-year-old manโโ
โShow some enthusiasm,โ she says, pulling the paper clear out of my grip. โHave some inflection in your voice. Itโs very hard to listen to you like this.โ
Apparently, Alyssa expects me to do a dramatic presentation of Mr.
Petrovichโs chest pain.
I try my best to present the patient with a reasonable degree of theatrical enthusiasm. By some miracle, I manage to get through the rest of the patient presentation without getting paged again. Alyssa grills me as we go, but at least I have a ready excuse: my patient doesnโt speak English and even the translator couldnโt understand him. Short of him performing an interpretative dance, there was no way to get a more thorough history.
โAll right,โ Alyssa finally says. โWhy donโt you go see if any of his labs are back yet?โ
I go over to the computer in the room and log in as Alyssa continues to glare at me. Iโm sure sheโs thinking that Connie would never dare present a patient to her that spoke no language dialect known to the human race.
The computer is taking forever to log me in. This is truly the slowest, oldest computer in the history of the world. Before our modern- day computers, people used calculators, and before that they used slide rules, and before that they used the abacus, and before that, they probably used this computer right here. The screen is about the size of my hand, and it has frozen up at least half of the times Iโve tried to log in to it. Fortunately, this time it allows me to successfully gain access. It must feel sorry for me.
Iโm copying down the patientโs labs when another intern I know vaguely from orientation enters the room. I glance at his badge and see his name is Rohit. He has huge dark circles under his eyes.
โHey, Jane,โ he says. โHowโs it going?โ
โAll right,โ I say cautiously, glancing over at Alyssa. โWere you on call last night?โ
Rohit nods. โYeah. Unfortunately.โ โHow was it?โ
โI donโt want to talk about it,โ he mumbles, collapsing onto the filthy sofa next to me. โSo are you taking sign-out? Someone told me you were.โ
โYeah, sure,โ I say. โJust give me one minute to finish copying down these labs before the computer logs me out and Iโll be right with you.โ
โNo problem,โ Rohit says as he shuts his eyes and probably falls instantly asleep.
โNo,โ Alyssa says, so sharply she jars Rohit awake. โJane, he is post-call. Drop everything youโre doing and let him sign out to you immediately.โ
โItโs really okay,โ Rohit tries to say, but Alyssa has already crossed her arms and says, โNow, Jane.โ
Now, it is.
I sit down next to Rohit and he fumbles around in the pockets of his white coat to pull out his sign-out sheets. This is a list of all his patients, their major diagnoses, and what needs to be done overnight. The pages are littered with yellow sticky notes, explaining things that need to be done: follow-up results of CT scan, check recommendations from the renal service, etc.
โI donโt think Iโve ever seen so many sticky notes in all my life,โ I say to Rohit, who laughs.
Alyssa, who is listening in, widens her eyes. โYou have sticky notes, donโt you, Jane?โ
I do? No, I donโt. โNoโฆโ I say.
โYou need to get some,โ Alyssa informs me. โItโs very helpful to attach them to the sign-out sheet to help the person on call remember what they need to do.โ
โGot it,โ I say. Apparently, Iโm going to be making a little post-call trip to the drug store to get some sticky notes.
When Rohit finishes going over the sign-out with me, I stuff the notes in my pocket, which I can tell Alyssa doesnโt like. What does she want me to doโframe them?
โYou need to learn to be more organized,โ Alyssa informs me. This is going to be a really long night.
The patients trickle in after that. Iโm conflicted in that I want to avoid being near Alyssa at all costs, but also terrified of being too far away from her because I donโt know how to answer any of the nursesโ questions. Well, I know how to answerย someย of the nursesโ questions. Like when they ask me, โโDoctor,โ have you written the admission orders yet on your patient?โ The answer to that is no. I have not.
One thing County Hospital is teaching me is that I led a very sheltered life. I had absolutely no idea that meth was such a popular drug. Apparently, meth is the newโฆ well, I donโt even know what was popular before meth. I am just that uncool. But trust me, meth is really popular. At least among people who seek medical care at County Hospital.
Hereโs another thing I never heard of in my sheltered life: skin popping. That means injecting drugs directly under your skin. Sounds fun, right? Apparently, it gets you a better high than ingesting or snorting the drugs, and I guess itโs easier than trying to find a vein. The only problem is that itโs a great way to get an abscess. (An abscess is a big ball of pus. Thatโs the official definition.)
At about 1O p.m., I meet Mr. Swanson, a 56-year-old man who has engaged in skin popping and now has a high fever and a huge abscess dangerously close to his groin. He also has a heart murmur that scares me a little bit, considering thereโs probably all sorts of bacteria floating around his bloodstream.
When Alyssa comes in to see Mr. Swanson with me in the admitting unit, I can tell sheโs impressed by the size of the abscess. Itโs the size of a tennis ball and deep red in color, located inches away from the line of his briefs, and he practically jumps off the bed when Alyssa puts her gloved fingers on it.
โThis is too deep under the skin,โ she says. โI think weโre going to need Surgery to drain this thing.โ
Translation:ย Jane, stop daydreaming and call Surgery right now!
Alyssa pulls her stethoscope from around her neck. She listens to Mr. Swansonโs heart for a moment then looks at me accusingly.
โHe has aย hugeย heart murmur,โ she says. โRight,โ I say. โI mentioned that.โ
โYou didnโt tell me how loud it was.โ โYeah, itโs pretty loud,โ I admit.
โYou can practically hear it across the room.โ Alyssa sighs and shakes her head at me. โYou better order an echocardiogram too. Make sure the heart valve isnโt infected.โ
โOkay,โ I say.
Alyssa looks me up and down. โDid you get those sticky notes yet?โ
I stare at her. Did sheย seeย me leave the hospital and take a trip to the stationery store to buy a pack of stickys? โNo,โ I have to tell her.
She shakes her head at me. โMake sure you get some.โ
As Alyssa flounces off to answer a page of her own, I quickly make a checklist of what I need to do:
- Contact Surgery to drain big ball of pus
- Order echocardiogram
- Get sticky notes
No problem.
I locate a phone where I call the operator, figuring reaching Surgery will be the more challenging task.
โHi, this is โDoctorโ McGill,โ I tell the operator. โCan you tell me whoโs on call for surgical consults tonight?โ
โThat would be Dr. Reilly,โ the operator says. โDo you want me to page him for you?โ
โNo, just give me his pager number,โ I say. I suspect it may take several tries to reach this Dr. Reilly.
I place a page to Dr. Reilly, and meanwhile flag down a nurse. She doesnโt look thrilled to be bothered by yet another clueless โdoctor.โ
โHi,โ I say, trying to sound as nice and respectful as possible. You gotta be nice to the nurses. Or else. โDo you know what form Iโm supposed to fill out to get an echocardiogram?โ
The nurse narrows her eyes at me then wordlessly goes to a file cabinet. Since she didnโt actually say anything to me, Iโm not entirely sure if sheโs looking for the form or if sheโs looking for something thatย sheย needs and has just decided to ignore me. I stand there like an idiot for a minute until she finally plucks out a white form and hands it over to me, then leaves without another word. Maybe she was mute?
I look down at the form. Itโs got tons of checkboxes but none of them say โechocardiogram.โ
Also, Dr. Reilly hasnโt called me back yet.
I page Dr. Reilly one more time while I sit and examine the form. How could it be this hard to order a simple echo? I mean, this is a test
that gets ordered all the freaking time. It should be on every form! It shouldnโt be some crazy puzzle.
Iโm still mulling over the form when by some miracle, the phone next to me rings. My page has been returned!
โHi!โ I say excitedly, forgetting myself for a moment. I clear my throat. โUh, this is โDoctorโ McGill.โ
I hear an irritable female voice on the other line. โIโm returning a page for Dr. Reilly.โ
โOh,โ I say. โUm, are you Dr. Reilly?โ
โNo,โ she says. Obviously Dr. Reilly is too important to return pages himself. Also, I think I am learning toย hearย people rolling their eyes. โDr. Reilly isย in surgeryย right now. He canโt be contacted.โ
โWell, I have a consult I need him to see,โ I explain. โWell, heโs in surgery,โ she says.
My head is starting to throb. โCan I leave a message for him?โ โNo,โ she says. โYou have to wait until the surgery is finished.โ โWell, when will that be?โ
โIโm not sure.โ
โButโฆโ I bite my lip. โIsnโt there supposed to be some way to contact him? I mean, what if there were a life or death emergency with a patient?โ
โYou can page him again after the surgery,โ the woman says.
Itโs becoming fairly obvious that this is a hopeless situation. Maybe Iโll try again in an hour. Itโs not like Iโm going to bed any time soon.
I hang up the phone and look back at the form. It hasnโt miraculously filled out itself while I was on the phone.
Thereโs a woman on the computer near me who doesnโt look horribly busy. I approach her and clear my throat loudly a few times until she looks up. โHi,โ I say. โCan you tell me what box to check to order an echo?โ
She looks down at the form then up at me. โTransthoracic or transesophageal?โ
โUm,โ I say. โTransthoracic?โ Or the other one. โThatโs the wrong form,โ she says.
Of course.
She returns to the file cabinet and rummages through it until she finds a new form, this one pink. She hands it to me, and I breathe a sigh of relief. At least Iโll have managed to accomplish one thing for Mr. Swanson.
I look down at the form. Thereโs still no box for echocardiogram.
I might cry.
Hours awake: 17 Chance of quitting: 78%