It has been a week since I last flossed. It seems like a confessional to the internal self to seek a pardon, and once again, promise to do better. It seems I seek a peaceful acceptance of all of my inadequacies within my inabilities too often.
This week was exactly like this… a series of internal
confessions with a humble begging for forgiveness to a self that doesn’t take
disappointment, or failure, easily.
This day, this Wednesday evening, within this moment, was about Mollie, Genie, Maxi, Taylor, and Sophie. They were all in some degree of desperate dying. Each patient was supported by at least two technicians, all wondering the same thing as I; how could so many catastrophes happen at once?, and, which one would start to crash/die on us first?
“We are not an E.R.” I hear myself produce these words almost daily these days. I am not sure why I even try to explain, or, perhaps more realistically, excuse myself. For every 100 times I recommend to a client that they transfer to the ER, 1 actually consents and goes. People just don’t/can’t/won't/refuse to go. For some of these cases they have already tried to get in. They have called, been directed to sign in via the online portal, and been notified that there is a 10 to 24 hour waiting period. People who are desperately worried for their pet’s life are not going to wait 10 hours. So, they drive to us. Many just show up. Arrive unannounced. Crash a party and hope that the door is open and the staff is welcoming. Depending on the degree of the emergency they may have called us. May have spoken to our Charge Tech to plea their case, which gets parlayed to a vet, and almost always given permission to “come up, be patient, and we will do our best.” I try with each case to set the stage for the reality that we are “not an ER” and may have to transfer them to one should it be in the best interest of the patient to do so. I know that even with this preface, this CYA blanket statement, that I invite the chaos, and hence, I internally beg for forgiveness yet again when I get myself too deep in the shit pile.
At 7 pm I was standing, circling and losing my mind amid the evenings vetmed emergency offerings I had unintentionally invited to my own misery party. I looked into the surgery room. On the table to the left was an 8-month-old puppy. I’ll call her Sophie. She was intubated, on oxygen, and poorly to absently responsive. Under her head sat a bucket of vomit with specks of white pills. To the right of her was Taylor. A five-month-old tabby with fluid in his chest. He was sleeping in a clear plastic box full of life saving, life giving super saturated 100% oxygen. He was happy and loving his time with us, thanks to the oxygen. Just outside the doors to the surgery in a little stainless-steel cage sat Mollie. She was barely visible behind her cluttered cage door with its two fluid pumps, iv fluid bags, (also two), and a clipboard holding checklist of her too numerous medications. You couldn't see her adorable face with its white fluff mane that surrounded her blunted nose and omni present wide mouthed grin framed within the haloed plastic e-collar. She was sitting up on her front feet but straining and posturing her back legs. She had spent the last week like this. Trying in vain to push out a stone that was lodged so deep down her urethra it was only permitting a drop of urine at a time to pass. In the cage beneath Mollie was Genie. A sweet, slow, aged Dobie who had been vomiting for four days. She came in as a mystery ailment and she remained the same until the next day when the 4-year-old in her family confessed to feeding her a whole box of chewy milk-bones. She was in critical condition and not able to move, except for the vomiting that just spilled out of her mouth as she lacked the strength to pick up her head. Skip a few feet to the left and there was Tigger. I.v. catheter running saline into his veins in the hopes we could flush out the grit in his bladder and dodge the need to place a urinary catheter. He had arrived 3 days earlier just about to block. We mounted the most aggressive defensive plan we could to spare him a urinary catheter and his mom the price tag it came with.
Gastric lavage |
This is one of the best examples I can give of where vetmed
is now. We have burnt so many people they don’t trust, or don’t want to be sent
to an ER. For all of the many reasons the ER’s have gotten themselves in the
predicament our clients see them as, it doesn’t change the reality that
accidents, illnesses and yes, even death comes to find us.
I see my husband for about 15 minutes daily. 15 minutes when I get home, typically around 9 pm, starving and exhausted. He has a meal waiting, typically two hours old, as I never get my ETA correct. I do not recollect any of the meals from the last week. Only that I inhaled them, and that the portions were too large. We go to bed with me feeling like a bloated corpse, and him angry that I cannot ever say “no.” He reminds me of my limitations and the power of “NO.” I remind him that there are few options in these scenarios that I can live with. I remind him that I am reminded that if I don’t help, I don’t know if anyone else will. If martyrdom was a pageant, I could have a crown to sit upon. Think I am being foolish? Well, lets talk about each of these cases in a little more detail. Wonder why I don’t floss? Well, I don’t do anything in this state. I fall asleep as soon as I hit my bed. Surrendering to the exhaustion like the coma that claims me. I repeat this Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday and Thursday. I fall off to sleep worried for the patients I saw. Fearful for those I failed, and afraid for those I will see. I cannot say “No” to these either. They find me in my dreams. Even here, as I try to rest I see them. I worry and react for them. I send them treatments, and apologies. A figment of a life preserver even here, when they aren’t near me.
The routine day |
My Storm,, his happy place. |
It is exactly in this moment that I have to decide. I do not
extend my arms. I do not rush to offer some act of heroism in a crucible of mercy. I have to make that
split second decision as to who I am and who I want to be remembered as. It is
in this second that your marrow matters. It is here that your consequences, your
good deeds, your ethos, and every second of every tid-bit of training finds you.
Your actions here will haunt you. I know this. This is the place where some
vets will offer “humane euthanasia” while others will offer extremis estimates for a
chance, and many will take a bad situation and make it hopeless. (To be honest I
never quite know if I ever pick the right offering of an answer. More on this
with Genie’s story to follow). What I wanted to do was ask her to remain there.
Put her on a pause, holding her rag-like puppy and make a quick physical exam
assessment and,,, punt. HARD. I did not want to be responsible for her. I did
not want to be responsible for a hysterical mom feeling guilty about an
accident I have seen so many times before. I did not want this dying puppy. I didn’t
want any of the hers in front of me asking for help. Now I know this sounds cold
and cruel, but the reality was that I had just finished a long morning of over
booked surgeries. I had come in early, after getting home very late, to try to
cram in all of the things that I had scheduled. There was not enough room for
them, never mind the falling deaths from the skies. I know this. I know I am supposed to say "NO!" I looked at her puppy, I looked
at her, the words slipped out softly, “I am not an ER.” I knew we didn’t have
the manpower, the time, nor the facility to help a puppy in this state to the
degree she needed. Sophie was purple, barely responsive and I was pretty sure she
was dying in her moms arms, if not already dead, and would die on her way to
the ER. I clumsily said as much. Mom begged me to “try” and I am a sucker for
that word. It is my verbal kryptonite. No other word compels me. Mom was hysterical.
Mom was not safe to drive. Mom was not going to make it to the ER with Sophie alive.
Sophie was in such a terrible state that I knew she had a
very narrow window. I took her in my arms and we headed into the treatment area. Over the next few minutes the story
of Sophie’s predicament unfolded. Her parents had left her at home for a few
hours. When they came back she ran to greet them, same as always. Within a few
minutes she had vomited and then they found the chewed up pill bottle. Scattered
around the bottle were large white aspirin-powdered pills. Baclofen. The label
was so chewed up that we had to use the pills and pharmacy information to
identify them. The bottle was filled for a 30 count. 13 remained. As the
technician called Pet Poison I debated her degree of consciousness and whether she
was awake enough to induce vomiting. She was not. Sophie had dried bloody,
thick, taffy-like saliva and vomit in her mouth. I tried to clear it. It was a sticky-spiderweb
goo that left your hands incapable. Sophie was placed on the x-ray table. She
had a huge distended stomach full of,,,, well, seemingly dog food and pills. We
whisked her to the surgery table, quickly intubated her and provided oxygen to
her purple lips and tongue. She was slipping into a coma. Four people, two of
them veterinarians, swarmed around her tiny new body. We placed a stomach tube.
We lavaged the stomach contents in a desperate effort to remove as much pill-peppered-ingesta
from her stomach as we could. The clear plastic tube sucked out tan kibble speckled
with white powdery-pieces of pills. She gagged once, whimpered once, and lay
lifeless for the rest of it. I gave her intermittent breaths of oxygen and told
her that I was sorry. I told her she was loved and I watched the staff so
desperate to help and so foreign in this act of emergency procedures. Sophie gathered a crowd and I barked orders to try to turn a tide I knew we were all
likely to drown within. I called the hospital manager down. I told her to call
all of the rest of my evening appointments and tell them we were swamped with
emergencies. “Offer to reschedule, (knowing this never works), and ask them to
be patient if they don’t want to. Go in all of the exam rooms, (I knew all 7
were filled with people waiting for us), and tell them the same.” I put her on
the reception desk and pulled the last two techs to the back treatment area.
For three doctors we had 8 technicians scurrying. We also had 17 patients in
our building, 7 wanted to crash and expire if you blinked.
I got on the phone with a veterinarian from the Pet Poison Helpline. He was slow spoken, jovial, and the calmness on his side of the line was re-assuring and yet vexingly annoying. “Baclofen is a common toxicity. Have you had one before?” There it came again, “No, I am not an ER.” ‘Don’t kill the messenger’ and ‘be nice.’ I said to myself. He is here to help me. (Does he know that I have 7 other animals trying to die around me?).
“Baclofen is a muscle relaxant,” (yeah, I can see that). “It
has a very narrow index of safety in dogs” (Like 1 pill? How about 17?). “Unfortunately,
(never want to hear a sentence start with this), most dogs, if they survive,
(never want to hear this either), need supportive care for 72 hours to up to 6
days. Many need to go on a ventilator.” (Crap, who has a ventilator? Only the veterinary
teaching hospitals, I thought). I kept
going. We kept lavaging, hoping, and telling her that I loved her with a gentle
pat to her head. I stroked her ears in between her oxygen bag compressions. If
she was going to slip away it would not be without my whole heart and soul going
with her.
Over the next hour we tried fluids and desperate attempts to stabilize. She was the last patient to leave the hospital that night. I called the local ER to refer. “No,” they had not had this toxicity either. “No,” they didn’t have a ventilator, but, “Yes” UPenn vet hospital does. They had sent a patient last week. Estimate given for this was $18,000 to $30,000. OMG Crap.
I look back on Sophie and I want to cry. I want to be upset
about how many times pets get into things we think that they are smart enough
to avoid. I want to put up billboards to say, “NO! crate training is not
punishment. It is the safest place for your pets to be.” My pups are 4 years
old. They are my children. My most beloved. They are also raccoons in
autographed collars. They will get into everything if I turn my head for a
second. They are trouble. I know that. They are crated when I am at work. They
are in a cage at the clinic. They are in a crate in the bedroom when we go out
the door. I don’t care if it is 5 minutes or 5 hours. They have been raised
this way. Every pill bottle in this house is double locked. A bottle in a
closed drawer. Never, ever is it out. Have you ever shaken a pill bottle next
to a pet toy? It’s all the same inviting tune.
In a sea of crashing waves, tumultuous and treacherous, I
will never forget Sophie’s face. I will never forget that yellow pill bottle
with its perfectly intact child-resistant white top, labeled as such. Tattooed with
its cursory; “push-down and turn” orange letters. Shrapnel-ed bottle, completely
missing any recognizable bottom, or rounded edges. The label chewed, swallowed
and obliterated in casual terrorist fashion.
Sophie was sent to the ER at 830 pm. She was transferred
without her breathing tube. She coded overnight. She never regained
consciousness.
I hope that she heard me. I hope that she knew she was
always adored. I hope that she forgives as much as I hope I can forgive myself.
Maybe I could have/should have used warmer water in her lavage? Maybe I should
have done it just one more time?
My Raffles,, on our daily "dog" walk |
Maybe forgiveness holds as much power as intentions? Maybe peaceful acceptance maintains the balance?
Maybe the other 6 will survive. Maybe I am an ER, if only in
sheep’s clothing?
My Frippie and Storm |