I've been getting CH's for 15 years. Last night my girlfriend had to call 911 for a trip to the ER room. It was one of those KIP10's, 2 1/2 hours, vomiting and sprawled on the bathroom floor types. At least i do it right, huh.
The medics were there in less than 10 minutes but it felt longer. I imagine it always does. It felt like KIP30MINUTES. I think I just invented a new scale.
I wish I didn't get these headaches but I have never felt sorry for myself. Last night was very stormy(I'm Jersey outside of Philly) and I was parked in the hallway on a gurney about 50 foot from the ambulance entrance. Keep in mind this is my first hospital visit ever. They were bringing "customers" in one after another. This went on for 3 hours. Then I heard over one of the nurses phones "code red, child, 10 minutes", soon to be followed by "code white 2", all necessary personnel and equipment to room 2 I deduced, because that's exactly what happened. Not a mad dash but orderly chaos. ETA 5 minutes, ETA 2 minutes, I see the pediatrics surgeon walk out from room 2, take a peek and turn around. Two other incoming accident victims arrive and are lined up on the far wall and wait with what i guess are minor injuries, because the EMT attendants have their backs to them looking towards room 2. I hear the nurse ask were are they, and she's says there's traffic and it's a storm out there. I can see that from my vantage point. Then I see lights flashing and it gets real quiet.
Did you ever watch one of those dozen or so ER shows and a code red comes in and they're running along the stretcher saying BP is blank over blank, get a cbc and etc.? Not here. The EMT's calmly push the stretcher through the door, one of them squeezing a bag, releasing, squeezing, releasing, never looking up. The other makes eye contact with a nurse. It's quiet. She points and holds up 2 fingers. They turn to go in to the room and I see a kid, bare legs half bent out to the side, bare arms over his/her head. I notice ER patient relatives peak out of doorways.
I was there for another 1/2 hour and they were still working on that kid. I do not know what the outcome was, I don't need to. I know that I am lucky
This is one of the songs I'm going to listen to tonight. I'm feeling pretty good.
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