Sunday, 13 December 2015

Complications (Part 1)



The first patient to arrive in the A&E this morning is clearly frail and unwell, he is only 40 but appears twice his age.  Unable to walk, his skeletal frame is supported by concerned relatives who assist him into the doctors’ office and lower him into a chair.  Even this minimal effort makes him breathless as he holds a cloth to his mouth whilst attempting to control a bout of coughing.  He struggles to speak so his relative does the talking, explaining how he is not eating and has been coughing for several weeks.  He has tried a variety of remedies and medications which have not helped and has tried to hide his illness from friends and family.  Now he is wracked with fever and too ill to manage at home.  His cheeks are hollow and his breathing shallow, he has clearly been unwell for some time and I am concerned that he has presented too late for treatment to tackle the TB and undiagnosed HIV that have ravaged his body.

The next patient is young, in her late teens and has been unwell for a couple of days with headache and fever.  She has deteriorated overnight and is now unconscious and lying on a trolley.  She is wheeled into the doctors’ room from the triage area accompanied by anxious looking relatives who give a history of a rapid progression of her symptoms.  She suddenly cries out and becomes tense as a brief seizure causes her body to spasm.  Her HIV test is negative but her blood sugar is low.  This is rapidly corrected but she remains drowsy.  Some basic investigations are requested but the results are unlikely to be available today so she is treated empirically for meningitis and severe malaria.  There are several other possible diagnoses but these are the most likely and easiest to treat.  As a result of funding initiatives, there are some emergency drugs and fluids available free of charge to critically unwell patients that present to the A&E but most medications need to be purchased by the patient.  The family are sent urgently to buy antibiotics and anti-malarial drugs while a bed is organised for admission.

The A&E is filling up already and a crowd of people now congregate in the courtyard, waiting to see the doctor and two community health officers that are working hard, staffing the department this morning.  The sick patients are effectively prioritised by the triage staff and today there seem to be a lot arriving in quick succession.  A lady in her sixties is carried in by her nephew, she is diabetic and taking medication for hypertension.  She has been unable to walk for 3 days and is not able to move her right arm or leg.  Her blood sugar is high and so is her blood pressure, she has been unable to afford regular medication and now she has had a stroke.  As the family do not have funds to pay for a CT scan, treatment is aimed at blood pressure control and prevention of complications such as pressure sores.  The hospital has an excellent physiotherapist who will aim to help restore some function.

Another emergency case is brought through from triage; a young man has been hit by a car whilst travelling to work on his motorbike.  There is no formal emergency ambulance service in Sierra Leone so he was brought in by his friend in a taxi.  He was not wearing a helmet and has sustained a significant head injury.  There is no neurosurgeon in country and ventilation on intensive care is not available currently.  He is assessed and transferred to the trauma ward for review by the surgical team but his outlook remains uncertain.

By mid-afternoon, the queue is diminishing and the early shift are preparing to go home.  There is one patient left in the triage room; he is a destitute patient with no possessions and no family to care for him.  He has been found in the street having been assaulted and left outside the hospital.  He has multiple wounds and his face is bruised and swollen, we are unable to obtain any information from him as he is agitated and incoherent.  He has no money for treatment, the admissions ward is now full and he certainly cannot be discharged in his current condition.  The sister in charge is able to find some dressings and the nurses try their best to clean him.  We try to locate a surgical bed in the hospital but draw a blank.  I’m really not sure what to do next, there is no easy answer here.

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing this Richard - puts the trials and tribulations of NHS emergency medicine into perspective. Keep up all the good work! Best wishes, Nick

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  2. Thanks very much Nick. Good to hear from you - all the best.

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  3. Great reading, thanks Richard. Keep up the good work! Hope the new construction goes well, look forward to blog posts about it!

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  4. Hi Richard, What do we have to complain about over here? This should be printed and put in every A&E dept!

    Sounds like you had a good trip home. We will be thinking of you over the Xmas season. xxx Gill xxx

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