Читать книгу A Nurse's Search and Rescue - Алисон Робертс - Страница 8
CHAPTER THREE
ОглавлениеIT DIDN’T turn out to be much fun after all.
The prospect of another night on the road as an observer with Matt and Joe had been the highlight of Tori’s week. The shift started with great promise and the priority-one callout to a car v. pedestrian resulted in an adrenaline-pumping, high-speed obstacle course through rush-hour traffic with Matt’s impressive driving skills tested to the limit.
The job was a fizzer, though, and it was almost embarrassing to turn off first the siren and then the beacons, having been informed by the owner of a secondhand furniture shop that the ‘victim’ had dusted himself off and walked home. Matt and Joe seemed quite philosophical about it, smiling and waving at the group of wide-eyed children who had gathered to watch. Matt blipped the siren in farewell as they pulled away and a small boy could be heard crowing with delight as the noise from the vehicle faded.
The second call, over an hour later, was to a ‘sick person’ who was apparently unwell enough to also require a priority-one response.
‘I’m dying,’ he told the crew as he lay on his bed with a damp cloth covering his eyes.
‘Don’t think so,’ Joe said cheerfully. Matt pulled a blood-pressure cuff from the kit and winked at Tori.
‘What’s been happening?’ he queried.
‘My head hurts. My eyes hurt. I’ve got a sore throat. I ache all over and I feel dizzy when I try and stand up.’
‘Anyone else in the family been unwell recently?’
‘My wife had the flu last week but she wasn’t this sick.’
Tori glanced at the woman standing in the doorway of the bedroom with a toddler balanced on one hip and an older child holding her free hand. She probably hadn’t had time to be that sick.
‘Have you seen your GP?’
‘No-o-o.’ The man groaned rather dramatically. ‘I’ve been too sick to try and get out of bed.’
His wife sighed wearily. ‘They don’t do house calls any more.’
They listened to their patient’s chest, which was clear, took an ECG, which was normal, and pricked his finger to test his blood-sugar levels—also normal. They recorded a normal blood pressure and a slightly elevated temperature. They noted a clean medical history and absence of any prescribed medications.
‘You’ve got the flu, mate,’ Joe told him finally. ‘You need to rest and keep your fluid intake up. If you take some aspirin or a cold and flu preparation, it’ll help the aches and pains. A day or two in bed and you’ll be as right as rain.’
‘But…you’re supposed to take me into hospital, aren’t you?’
‘We can take you if that’s what you really want,’ Matt said, ‘but you’ll be in a very bright, busy, noisy emergency department. You’ll be well down any priority list and it could take hours to see a doctor, who will probably send you straight home again with the same advice we’ve just given you. By then it’ll be about 2 a.m. and you will have missed a good few hours’ sleep.’ Matt’s tone became much less forbidding. ‘Why don’t you try and get some rest at home and see how it goes? You can always call us back if things get worse.’
‘Can I?’
‘Of course.’ Joe was latching the kit. ‘That’s what we’re here for.’
The patient’s wife saw them to the door. ‘I’m so sorry,’ she said. ‘I wanted to take him to the after-hours clinic but he really did seem very sick and I couldn’t carry him to the car.’
‘Man flu,’ Tori pronounced as they headed back to station. ‘It’s a terrible thing.’
‘Careful,’ Matt warned. ‘You’re outnumbered right now.’
Tori was unimpressed. ‘Let’s hope the next one is a female patient,’ she said. ‘We might actually get a genuine case.’
They had to wait nearly two hours for the next call and the patient was, indeed, a female.
It was also very genuine.
* * *
The address was central city, one of a run-down group of old houses that backed onto a commercial and industrial street. Tori eyed the unkempt garden cluttered with rusting car bodies with some misgivings. The house looked equally uninviting. Window-panes were cracked or broken, curtains hung in ragged shreds. The front door stood ajar and revealed a dimly lit hallway strewn with rubbish. A strong smell of cannabis drifted out as they waited for a response to Matt’s knock.
‘Hello!’ Matt moved into the hallway. ‘Ambulance here.’
Tori hoisted the weight of the oxygen cylinder to hold it in her arms. While grateful for the solid presence of Matt and Joe in front of her, knowing she had a potential weapon of her own for self-defence was reassuring.
‘Hello!’ Matt called more loudly. ‘Anyone here?’
A man appeared at a doorway near the end of the hall. Naked to the waist, jeans undone, his body was covered with tattoos. Metal spikes protruded from piercings beneath his bottom lip and added considerably to the belligerent expression on his face. He took the joint of cannabis from where it appeared to be stuck to his lower lip.
‘Whaddyawant?’
‘Someone called an ambulance to this address.’ Matt had stopped and now he moved back in a subtle fashion, which Joe mirrored. Tori found herself surrounded and knew that both these men were poised to protect her if necessary.
‘Wasn’t me,’ the man said.
‘She’s out the back.’ A female voice came from someone still in the room behind the male occupant of the house. ‘In the garage.’
Matt turned and touched Tori’s shoulder. ‘Let’s go,’ he murmured.
They went out the way they had come in, found a gap between the hulks of wrecked cars and discovered a double garage with its side door hanging open.
Two teenage girls, devotees of Gothic styling, sat on a bare mattress just inside the door. They stared at the newcomers with matching blank faces.
‘Hi, there. I’m Matt from the ambulance. This is Joe and Tori. Did you guys call for us?’
‘Yeah.’ One of the girls pointed to the other side of the garage. ‘It’s Charlene. She won’t wake up.’
Another young girl lay on her side between two mattresses piled with some old blankets and pillows that were losing their stuffing. Matt rolled her over onto her back.
‘Charlene, can you hear me? Open your eyes, love.’
There was no response. Even in the dim light provided by the single bare bulb dangling in the centre of the garage Tori could see the blue tinge of cyanosis on the girl’s lips.
Joe was uncurling the leads from the life pack to attach electrodes. He cut through a thin sweatshirt to expose what looked like the underdeveloped chest of a child. Having determined that Charlene was not breathing, Matt flipped open the kit and pulled out the bag mask. Tori grabbed the end of the tubing and pushed it onto the oxygen cylinder’s connection. She fitted the key to the valve, twisted it open and turned the flow up to fifteen litres a minute—the highest available.
Matt tipped the girl’s head back and lifted her chin to open her airway, having checked that there was no obstruction in her mouth. He fitted the mask and inflated the bag twice to deliver two full breaths. Then his fingers went to the side of Charlene’s neck.
‘No pulse,’ he reported grimly.
Joe simply nodded. The display on the screen of the life pack was just settling into a readable rhythm.
‘Fine VF,’ he announced, equally grim. Tori could understand why. When first in cardiac arrest, a rhythm of ventricular fibrillation was coarse, with the wiggles much further away from a flat base line. There was far more chance of converting a coarse VF into a perfusing rhythm. The longer the ‘downtime’, the finer the wiggles…and the less hope there was that a life could be saved.
‘What’s happened here?’ Matt directed the question to the girls still sitting near the door. ‘How long has she been like this?’
One of the girls shrugged. ‘Dunno.’
‘Stand clear,’ Joe directed. ‘Shocking at 200 joules.’
Matt moved backwards so that he wasn’t touching the patient. He put the bag mask down and reached for his radio. After a rapid request for back-up to a cardiac arrest, he turned to his kit.
‘Could you hold the torch to give me some decent light, please, Tori? I’ll intubate in a minute.’
‘Sure.’ Tori clutched the torch and held it high enough to cast a useful circle of light. She watched in dismay as Joe delivered a second and then a third shock, with no change to the fatal cardiac rhythm displayed on the life pack screen.
Matt unrolled the intubation kit. ‘Put the torch down for a sec and hyperventilate her for me, Tori.’
She did as requested, giving the girl as much oxygen as possible before the procedure of securing her airway with the tough, plastic tube. Then she held the torch again, holding her own breath in sympathy with the look of intense focus on Matt’s face as he lifted the tongue with the laryngoscope and angled the light on the instrument to visualise the vocal cords.
Tori was ready with the bag mask when Matt had inflated the balloon on the ET tube to help secure its position. He listened for the sound of moving air as Tori squeezed the bag, to ensure it was going into the lungs and not the stomach which would indicate incorrect placement of the tube.
‘We’re in,’ he announced. ‘Start CPR, Joe, and I’ll get IV access.’
Tori inflated the girl’s lungs twice after every fifteen of Joe’s chest compressions. They kept it up for a full minute, by which time Matt had an IV cannula inserted and a bag of saline attached. Then Tori sat back to allow Joe to start the next series of three shocks. Matt was drawing adrenaline into a syringe. He looked up as he twisted the top off the second ampoule.
‘Somebody needs to tell us what’s been going on here,’ he told their silent audience. ‘It could make a difference to whether we can help Charlene or not.’
His words had an effect. One of the girls burst into tears and the other one put her arms around her.
‘Leave her alone,’ she shouted at Matt. ‘It’s not Jamie’s fault.’
Tori felt, rather than heard, Matt sigh. ‘How old is Charlene?’ he asked.