This is a guest post by my mother. She has written about the time she fell sick and had to admitted to hospital. This is her first blogpost and she has said she will soon start her own blog. Till then, please read this post.
The Bilge Master
I used to
always joke about summoning paramedics, and urge my family to book me an ICU
(Intensive Care Unit). ICU’s are places generally remote from an ordinary human
being’s life. So, if I caught a cold in my head, or the curry didn’t come out
nice or if I lost a spirited argument with my son; I would holler for
ambulances and booking of ICU’s. Little did I know then that one day I would
seriously end up in an ICU with my life seriously threatened, by a disease
called septicaemia.
I had been
ailing for some time, with a Urinary Tract Infection (UTI). Days passed.
Apparently I did not get better, but worsened as the sodium/potassium balance
in my body got seriously upset and white blood cell counts rose alarmingly and
the poison leaked into the blood; laying all my organs vulnerable. Blissfully,
I don’t remember any part of it, but I have since heard from my son and husband
that I could not stand, kept falling down, urinated all over the house, because
I never quite managed to reach the bathroom in time.
I’m a
fifty-three year old housewife. Obese. Riddled with blood sugar, hypertension,
and despite urgings from everybody, refuse to walk, follow a healthy diet and
spend my time shared between my books and laptop. I love drama and so when the
most dramatic thing happened in my life, I was unfortunately quite unaware of
it. The paramedics arrived, the
ambulance was summoned and I was driven from Asansol to Durgapur’s Mission
Hospital in a semi conscious state.
I don’t
remember the emergency room where I was first taken, where the decision to put
me into ICU was made. Neither do I remember being wheeled into the ICU and put
to bed there. The ICU was a cavernous room where very sick people-both men and
women were placed for intensive care. The first couple of days and nights are
also now quite lost to me. I remember only blood samples being taken at random,
breathing through a mask supplying oxygen and being attached to a monitor . All
I wanted was to be left alone to die.
Obviously,
in the first couple of days, my sickness
waxed triumphantly and the doctors were finally forced to give me a fifty-fifty
chance. I have heard later on, that the doctor in charge of my case had said
that he was “trying”. My husband said that he had got nowhere with just
“trying” but by doing The consultant was taken aback but by gum he did it. On
the third day in the ICU, despit e the channels and the drips and the oxygen
mask, I came to myself, and became aware of arteries being cut with needles for
blood, bodily thirst for water and I was aware of being attached to a catheter.
The vaguest impression of people on either side of me became realistic when
they both died and had to be removed. From every bed, emanated pain and extreme
suffering. Strapped to my bed, I just watched and realized that this in fact,
was ICU.
My bed would
be wheeled out, for various tests and back again. Many a time, I felt that I
was going away from it all and this meant the nursing staff crowding around and
doing things and I would come back.
My husband
and son came to visit me regularly. They conferred with doctors. Ventilators
were frely spoken of, but I stayed put. The only organs that had been affected
by the infection in the blood were the lungs
and they dealt with it.
They were
short staffed as far as nursing personnel went, each doing 12 hour shifts,
looking after so many. A bunch of young kids really-boys and girls who dealt
with death daily and 90% of the time managed to triumph over the old equalizer.
They reminded me of my favourite serial, M*A*S*H as they kept sane with crude
jokes and basically slapstick comedy. The white blood cells were cowered by the
wide spectrum antibiotics. Spread of infection ceased. By the fifth day, I felt
hungry. I was now only scared of the ICU and marvelled at those working there
day in day out. Finally, I was pronounced stable enough to be moved to a room
of my own and the transfer went through.
I left the
ICU with mixed feelings. On one hand I was very glad to leave the hall of pain.
On the other, deep gratitude, not only to the doctor, but the nurses whose
round the clock care had pulled me through. I went to a private room. Here
again, I saw the dedication of nursing and doctoring. Finally, nine days after
I had gone there, I was allowed to leave the hospital and walked out on my own
steam, weak as a cat but alive and well.
I will not
sit around anymore. The ICU taught me the value of life and I am going to keep
better and hope that nobody has to go there again.