Thursday, December 31, 2015

Celebrating miracles


“The shadow proves the sunshine”
            Switchfoot.





It’s taken a long time to put these words onto paper. Many times I’ve started writing them and had to stop. But the celebration of this little boy’s first birthday seemed like the most fitting way to share his story.
Some of you already know it; have heard it over cups of tea when it was still fresh and raw and uncertain. The four hours I spent with him changed so much about the way I see the world and people – but not for the worse… for the better. It is my hope that when you read this story you see what I see – not the tragedy, but the miracle.

5:25 am.
The call should have been winding down as the first wash of sunlight began to run across the black night sky.
I was aware of the time because of the colour change I could see through the tiny windows in the paeds room in casualty, and because I had just turned off my alarm that would normally have woken me. Today it was almost two hours behind the casualty officer who had called earlier about some admissions.

I heard the sister call me to “just quickly see if this baby is alright to go upstairs” and turned to see a young man, early twenties maybe, cradling a mass of pink and yellow baby blanket. All I remember about him is the panic in his eyes.
I could only see the baby’s face – big eyes, a soft little cry, dusky pink lips.
“No, he’s fine to go upstairs”.
He was a BBA (born before arrival). This was straightforward labour ward stuff. I had enough to deal with down here.
Still, something turned in my stomach when they had left the room… a nagging feeling that maybe I should have opened the blanket.
“You’re being paranoid,” I distinctly remember thinking.

5:35am
My intern called - for some reason the time on my phone is a clear flash of memory.
“Hey Scotty. What’s up?”
“Linda – I don’t know what is going on here but this kid has a hole in his trachea…”
“A what?”
“A hole… in his trachea…I don’t know…”
“Ok Scotty, where are you?”
“4th floor.”
“I’m coming.”

In the back of labour ward I found him holding an oxygen mask over the baby’s face, and the obstetrics registrar plugging holes in the neck. The baby was still fighting, kicking his little legs and waving his little arms. There may have been a bit of cry but I really only remember the shrieking of an angry saturation monitor; partly because it was struggling to pick up a nice trace but mostly because when it did the oxygen saturation was 40-something percent (less than 90 is bad).
The air was tense and uneasy. Scotty’s eyes were full of intern distress. I could see the obstetric registrar was desperate to get away.
“Someone’s hurt this baby,” she said.

I took over from Scotty at the airway and counted maybe seven or eight puncture marks on the front and right side of his neck and chest. Some were bleeding, some were bubbling and some were jagged. One or two were clean and elliptical. Flashbacks to forensic medicine in 5th year - textbook blade marks.
The realization of what I was seeing hit me hard – a physical blow to my stomach that stopped my next breath. For a split second I felt myself pulled back tight, like an elastic band stretched, as if leaving would undo what had been done; and then just as abruptly with the next breath, snapped back to reality.

So I started with what I knew.
Airway. Breathing. Circulation.
Everything around me became irrelevant. All I registered for the next hour was the little person in front of me, Scotty on my right and the obstetrics registrar on my left.
We decompressed a tension pneumothorax but even so the oxygen saturation only climbed into the fifty’s. I knew a tube was unavoidable, but as I started to explain to the obstetric sister how to mix intubation drugs for a three-kilogram newborn, I realised in one breath the futility of the exercise and the fact that any kind of anaesthetic at this point was probably going to kill him.
So I haphazardly ticked that ICU intubation checklist in my head (I now understand the exercise completely) and proceeded with an awake-intubation.
It is a cruel thing to do I’m sure – but it probably saved his life. Because he never stopped breathing there was time to find his cords amid all the blood at the back of his throat, time to watch them flick open and slip the tube in without his oxygen levels plummeting and his hear rate dropping to a virtual stop.
By this time Scotty had a drip up and was pushing a bolus of fluid and just like that we had oxygen saturation of 98% and a trace on the monitor. I think we laughed at this point because a sigh of relief was not big enough.

In the process though hands came off his neck. Fingers stopped plugging holes and it was less than ten minutes and we were losing our circulation again.
We tried pressure bandaging, which didn’t work.  I didn’t have any other ideas.
A second fluid bolus settled things for a few minutes again and the realisation that we had blood.
Good old un-typed, O-negative, emergency blood.

It was probably about 6:45am.
At this point I decided my consultant had slept enough…

“Hi…so I’m dealing with a bit of a unique situation… I’ve got a BBA here that I’m resuscitating…who’s been stabbed in the neck and the chest.”
Silence…
Maybe a soft “ok”.
“I’ve tubed him and dripped him, I’m about to start emergency blood… but I need you to come…”
“Ok.”
“I need someone to make phone calls, and write letters and I just need more hands…”
“I’ll be there in 20 minutes”

There were still enough veins to get a second drip up. The first bolus of blood made him pinker. He was textbook fluid responsive.
We managed to move him up to NICU where there were brief moments of control, but mostly the growing sensation of sand slipping through my fingers.
Too be honest, I don’t think I even considered that we were actually going to save this baby. I only knew at each point what the next right thing was to do and in this resuscitation the next right thing involved a vascular surgeon. I was out of options on this end. I could only keep running through ABCD, looping back again and again, like a song stuck in your head, until we reached the point where the blood that was saving him turned toxic. I knew when we crossed that line we would not be able to pull him back across. I also knew that that was the only way I was going to stop fighting.

My consultant arrived and got hold of the surgeon at Red Cross*. The trauma team knew we were incoming. I told them to let ICU know. The flying squad was booked.
The responses were always the same.
“I need to transfer a 1 day old baby”
“What’s the diagnosis?”
“Stab neck and chest”
“Excuse me?”
“Yes… ”

Around 8:30/9am
“So it’s true?” the paramedic said when he arrived for the pick-up.
By this stage my baby was bleeding not just from his wounds but also from his drip sites and his nose. If we hadn’t already crossed the line, we were walking dangerously close to it. I had given him a whole adult bag of blood (just under one and half times his normal blood volume) to try stay on top of his circulation, but in the process I had flushed out most of his hope of clotting. On the gas his pH was undetectably low, his lactate was undetectably high, his potassium was approaching double digits. We were hovering perilously close to a cardiac arrest. I was flabbergasted that we hadn’t seen one already.
My consultant went with in the ambulance so someone could keep pressure on the neck for transfer.
I watched them go certain he would die… if not in the ambulance, not long after he got to Red Cross.
I was sure he was never going to make it to theatre.

As the adrenaline rush tapered, like the tide being sucked out slowly before the tsunami rushes, the magnitude of what had just happened hit me when I walked into the on call room. The city was only just stirring on New Years day. No one I could think to call would possibly be awake yet. Those who were, were all working like me. In the silence I felt heavy and tired, sad and angry and defeated.
I worried about Scotty, who was still so new in this profession and not yet conditioned to the violence that we had just witnessed. Even worse, there was actually so little to say. These are the moments you must wrestle through in your own mind and decide to keep going despite them in this job. Often you must do it without being able to really understand how something like this happened. There are often no answers about motive and means. You write a chapter in the story, but you never see it as a whole.
I have deliberately left out the who, the how and the why because the bits and pieces I have heard are jagged and broken, and mostly speculation and conjecture.

I left somewhere between 11am and middday. In the hours that followed there was a bit of sleep, a few phone calls, and a fair amount of tears. I knew no one would be surprised if I didn’t show up for work on the Friday.

The details of what happened on the other side I know from what others have told me.

Not long after he arrived, his heart stopped.
As far as I know, three paediatricians, at least two surgeons, a trauma doctor and an anaesthetist resuscitated my baby.
After twenty minutes there was some debate as to whether letting him go would be kinder, but for reasons only a Red Cross doctor can explain, no one would make the call. After forty minutes, there wasn’t much of a pulse, but there was a heartbeat, so they took him to theatre.
Altogether the surgeons stitched up twenty-two wounds.
Neither of his carotid arteries were touched but both of his external jugulars had been hit. His trachea was fine; the bubbles must have been coming from his lung. The wound on his abdomen hit nothing.
Almost 12 hours after he was probably born, he made it to ICU. His blood pressure was too low. His blood wouldn’t clot. His kidneys and liver stopped completely and he needed dialysis. His lungs looked horrible. He started having seizures.
No one could quite understand how he was alive. No one expected him to survive.

He proved us all wrong in the end and just kept going.
After two weeks his kidneys and his liver turned around.
After three weeks he came off the ventilator.
After a month he made it into the general ward.
After two he was discharged into a place of safety.

I saw him after about three months when a friend spotted him at a follow-up clinic and called me.  He was still so little, but he smiled.
A year down the line one of the loveliest ICU sisters is fostering him and in her home he has fattened up and flourished.
He is chatting and crawling and full of little boy mischief.
His story is surely one of the happiest I ever get to tell. His smiles and cuddles are the most precious I get to see.
Almost everyone I tell this story to say I saved his life – but so much more saved this little boy.
Scotty saved him.
My consultant saved him.
The trauma team saved him.
The anaesthetist. The surgeons.
The ICU team saved him.
And in the end, it’s the family that have taken him and loved him desperately and deeply that save him every day.


* Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Paeds ICU: This place I love and hate


“an intimate friend and a hated enemy have always been indispensable to my emotional life...not infrequently…friend and enemy have coincided in the same person”
Sigmund Freud

The first time I rotated in the unit as a registrar, I had been a doctor for almost six years and working in paediatrics for just about three. Despite this, it was unlike any kind of medicine I had ever been exposed to. 
It was intense and pedantic. It was pathology on steroids - literally and figuratively. At it’s best it was every kind of complication straight out of a text book and at it’s worst it was vaguely referenced on Google. There were medications I had never heard of, procedures I had never seen and
equipment that looked science-fictional.
It felt that if you touched something you would break it (including the kids) and if you said something it would be ridiculously stupid and probably invoke the famous sigh of deepest disappointment from the boss.
It was the worst kind of feeling a doctor can feel, overwhelmed and out of control and not surprisingly I hated it.

I’m not convinced all that much was different the second time around, except maybe that  I am regrettably a little bit older, theoretically a little bit wiser, and unfortunately a tad bit tougher.

It’s still crazy busy.
On a good day it is well controlled chaos and on a bad day, concentrated visual mayhem. Eight hour work days are still just a human resources guideline and afternoon handover rounds routinely stretch into early evening.
There is always light, always noise, always movement.
Empty beds are filled again quickly, families hover on the edges, shuffling in and out. You can get through a day and night without ever really stopping. Eating while writing notes and hydrating with coffee and energy drinks.

The kids are still the sickest of the sick.
Replaced by some strange robotic version of themselves – faces hidden by CPAP masks or ET-tube strapping, fed with tubes and drips and flattened with sedation so that their cries are replaced with the beeping of monitors.
They come, sometimes failed by the systems that should see them fed properly, immunized properly or managed earlier properly. Sometimes they come for no clear reason at all. Well fed, well cared for, overwhelmingly loved – struck down randomly by a particularly devastating infection, or a car, or a bullet, or a fire.

The stories are still raw.
On one of my recent calls I took over a beautiful baby girl who’s body was shutting down in the face of overwhelming sepsis. After a long night of struggling, all of the tricks had been tried without success and in the early hours of the morning she started to slip away. I explained to her tired parents that there was nothing left to do and watched her sweet dad stand next to her bed, take her little hand and say firm and loud… “You can go now my baby. You can go.”

I know exactly what you’re thinking. How could you like this? Could you ever even love it? 
So why was my heart heavy all of the last week at the thought of walking out on the last day?
Could it be some strange version of Stockholm syndrome?
You see; I love the mayhem less than the controlled chaos, but it does keep me on my toes.
I love the chatter, the team work, the friendships that form on ward rounds and coffee breaks, and in the inappropriate laughter that follows a serious situation – a misunderstood form of debriefing.
I love the babies. I love how they are resilient despite what they’re up against. I love taking them off ventilators and finding their faces. I love watching them peel away their sickness and sedation to show you a smiling little person underneath.
I love how much it teaches me… not only about physiology and pharmacology, but about myself and what my strengths are as much as exposing my flaws; how it pushes me to be better at being a paediatrican and a person.
Lastly, I love that it’s raw – because I think it means that despite being more mature, less naïve and thicker-skinned, there is still plenty of heart left.


Saturday, July 4, 2015

Shades of Grey

Sometimes it’s easy to have an opinion on things.
They’re black and white. Chalk and cheese.
Education is always better than leaving school.
There’s enough medical evidence for smoking to be a bad idea regardless of its ‘coolness’.
 But then there are other things that are less clear. Those run on a gray scale spectrum of good or bad – pregnancy termination, death penalties and such.
 When people ask me the question – “Do you enjoy your job?” I always pause before I answer. It never comes to me as a resounding yes or no.
In the same moment on the same day I can love it and hate it equally and in a different moment on a different day the one emotion can far outweigh the other.
Similarly my Christianity, my pursuit of a relationship with God,
is a constant battle between blind faith and certain disbelief. Yet it is something that has been growing in my soul for so long, a solid mass with so many delicate vessels and connections it could never come out without certain risk of death.

In a strange new space recently, I have experienced polar opposite emotions within situations, in one space in my heart. There is no spectrum – just one feeling on one side of a line and another on the other. Clearly separated yet together – like cerebral hemispheres inside a skull.

The first was earlier this year when in the early hours of 2015, I found myself standing over a 3kg, brand new baby boy, desperately trying to make sense of the 22 stab wounds to his neck and chest.
I felt my heart tear in 2 down the middle, slowly and crudely like a piece of paper. On one side, a picture of a person walking backwards out of the room, curling up with horror, revulsion and nausea at the evil that must have circled this little boy while he waited to enter the world and how his first few cries would have been from pain and shock not just him catching his breath.
On the other side is a picture of a robot, running through the ABC’s of a trauma and a neonatal resuscitation. Cool and calm and 2 steps ahead. No emotion. Just doing what it was programmed to do.

The second was yesterday.
I could feel the hospital buzzing from the moment I got the call about 2 kidneys that had become available for transplant at 5:30am. However, when I went up to theatre to give them the names of the recipients, on the list, above the 2 kidneys and liver transplants was the name of a little boy in ICU and ‘organ harvest’ in the procedure column.
The whole day I found my mind clambering clumsily from one side of the fence to the other.
Obviously, the excitement and relief that comes with the hope of 3 children being pulled back from less life is worth all the bubbles in all the bottles of champagne in the whole world. At the same time though, in the same building but on a different floor, another family is grieving. Saying goodbye to a slugs and snails and puppy dogs tails 4-year-old little boy who hopefully never saw the car coming. The tragedy of that is heavy and unimaginably dark.

Science dictates that light and dark cannot exist together – the presence of the one negates the other.
I’m not sure I agree.

It seems to me they can.