Posted on 02/28/2007 12:26:43 AM PST by 60Gunner
I hear you. They have to pay me to be there. ;o)
The only highlight for me is if they have one or two really good looking nurses, which is rare for when I usually show up: in the middle of the night, strapped to a stretcher pulled out of an ambulance...
Thanks for the story. I am sitting here in my drawers after another horrendous shift in our Emergency Department trying to get sleepy so I can sleep a few hours before I have to go do it again. I was late getting out because I had to do the Blood Born Pathogen routine on a cop who got stuck with a dirty needle while searching a Crack Heads car. As I was leaving through the E.D. waiting area, I had to go around the fist fight in the middle of the triage area between the HIV positive guy who was stabbed and the guy who did the stabbing who had apparently come back to finish the job.The Police who were there with their buddy who got needle stuck decided to break the fight up, so I took advantage of the lull in the fight to get out the door. The friends of the Stabee and the Stabbor were fighting in the parking lot , but I managed to miss all of them as I zipped out of the lot. Just rereading this makes me tired so I am going to sit back and finish my can of Vienna Sausage and drink my diet soft drink before I go on to bed.... Gosh, sometimes I LOVE MY JOB....Keep up the good work...
They give us in the infantry(ex) the CIB if we fight in action. They need to give ER folks a medal for stuff like that...
I agree--- by the way, I was a door gunner then a flight engineer on a Chinook Helicopter in Viet Nam before I went into emergency Medicine... I call it my premed crash course.....LOL.. I feel right at home...
If you get enough narcotics, I can be pretty good-looking. (shudder).
LOL! Having seen the action at the ER at Charity in New Orleans, I'd consider Baghdad safer at some times...
They've pumped plenty of painkillers into me, in fact last month, during a seizure, my shoulder was knocked out of it's socket, and I didn't realize it till later that night, when the meds wore off. That got me another trip to the ER the next morning where the doctor, after taking X-Rays and keeping me in agony for an hour or so, pushed my shoulder back into the socket(on a scale of 1-10 as far as pain is concerned, this was 11).
But they've yet to pump enough stuff into me where I can't distinguish between a good-looking babe and a guy... ;^)
And I don't mean the Moe Jacket:)
Glad you enjoy your work. ER Docs, as my friend told me years ago, essetially are telling he whole world "I fear no disease". After a year moonligting as one I discovered ther were a whole lot of diseases I feared...
God Bless you.
Thanks for the ping 60Gunner
Best Regards
alfa6 ;>}
My worst pain ever, (and I have had some significant injuries) was when I had a blood clot, blocking my popiteal artery. No amount of morphine helped.
Thanks again 60Gunner for your excellent posts.
oops, I left the point out of my post. I'm with you ABG, they don't make enough drugs for that to happen.
LOL!
Wow!
Just Wow!
Words fail me.
I have a cousin who has done ER work at BAMC. The stories he can tell, well....
You guys are awesome!
ER Nursing stories ping.
You gotta write that book!
These stories are too kewl. And I hate hospitals.
Nice job! The only Torsades I've seen are in a textbook.
It is rewarding to feel pretty damn good after a long nights work. Great job! Keep the stories coming
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