Saturday, November 22, 2008

Admitting defeat

Damn stupid virus.

So, last night, right, Sparrow and I had left it that I would go in for call this morning, insisting of course that I was fine, and then Cleo (who was on call last night) would assess me, and if she felt I lacked capacity to make the decision about taking call (sorry, shrink joke), she'd send me home and Sparrow would pinch hit, at least for the day shift. But, of course, I would be fine.

Ah, it was a good plan...

So I got all, like, I'm going to bed. I'm going to be well-rested and fine tomorrow. Ahh, bed. Except...once I laid down...I couldn't breathe. No, really. My nose was dripping, my sinuses were full of concrete, and every time I relaxed enough to get to sleep I'd shut my mouth and then start suffocating. Which was between the times I started choking and coughing as I kept drowning in my own secretions. Ugh, it was awful.

So I finally gave up around 12:30 and decided to do something about it. I put on some passable clothing, climbed into my car, and headed for the Walgreens.

::sigh:: I hadn't even made it past the hospital before I got pulled over.

Okay, fine, so my tags are expired. Because in Illinois, they send you a letter reminding you that your plates are about to expire. In North Carolina, they send you a letter reminding you that, hey darlin', your tags expired two months ago and you should really get that fixed.

How was I supposed to know?

Fortunately, Officer Friendly was "feelin' the holidays" and took pity on my snotty, pathetic, transplanted self. So I went to Walgreens, bought cough syrup, and Afrin, and nose strips, and saline spray. And wound up continuing to cough and drip and drown all night. Except I couldn't swallow, because my throat was so sore from the Afrin. And I was sweating and tossing and turning and, oh, yech, it was a terrible night.

This morning, when my alarm went off at 6:30, there was just no way I was going to be of use to anybody today. And, my temp was still 102. So Sparrow took the first half of my shift (did I mention she was a goddess?) and JD took the overnight (he is also fabulous, although - to his relief, I'm sure - not a goddess). Ohh, thank God.

Although...I can't even begin to tell you how guilty I feel. I know, I know, stupid, unwarranted (ahem, 102) - and not that I won't pay back the time - but there nonetheless.

So, Maggie and I sat around most of the day trying to nap (she was a lot more successful at that than I) and watching TV. The unfortunate part of that is, while Thursday and yesterday I had a lot of good stuff accumulated on the DVR...today, the TV was crappy.

Which did not stop me from watching it. Despite all the interspersed commercials about how part of a healthy lifestyle is limiting TV to two hours per day or less (ha!). And my increasing guilt about what a disaster the house is (because I haven't really moved in. For a whole bunch of ridiculous neurotic reasons and a couple of moderately reasonable ones - like I have too much stuff and a significant paucity of time). But I'm siiiiiiiiiiick....

I watched a documentary on the Jonestown tragedy (which was 30 years ago this week) on the History Channel. I watched a terrible Lifetime movie. I watched a couple of episodes of Scrubs, and M*A*S*H, and the Cosby Show. I forgot how much I used to want to be Claire Huxtable...

I watched a show on Freebirthing on Discovery Health that was...well, interesting. My cousin blogged about this (and the show I watched after it) earlier in the week, and I was intrigued. Hmm. As a former deliverer of babies, I cannot in any way condone what they're doing. Cannot condone no prenatal care (a drug store BP cuff and a fetoscope? Come on). Cannot condone knowing that you may have something wrong that could easily kill you and your baby in minutes and not getting it checked out. Cannot condone such over the top disregard of what we've learned over the past several thousand years.

There was this one woman I just wanted to slap (the one with the drugstore prenatal care and the possible low-lying placenta. Minutes). She was going on and on about how horrible her first birth was and, you know, if she'd only known how risky the interventions were that they were doing (minutes!! Bloody! Horrible! Traumatic! Well before your husband would even call EMS!). Please. Because a shoulder dystocia or a cord accident without the benefit of a trained attendant, yeah, that's not risky. She also ranted about how, at her first delivery, the doctors kept yelling at her that she wasn't pushing right. And she didn't know "what the big deal was, because, you know, it only took like ten minutes."

That's when I started yelling (well, rasping) at the TV.

Okay, now, I concede that I haven't delivered as many babies as she - oh, no, wait, I probably have a couple hundred on her. And I can tell you, when we start saying things like that in a situation like she described, it's because the baby's in trouble.

Which is the PERFECT indication to have a baby far away from any medical care. Idiot. Shouldn't be allowed to breed.

Ahem.

But on the other side of it...you know, I don't support unattended births. I don't even really support home births, because they scare me. I concede that women have been doing this for thousands of years. I absolutely concede that more births around the world occur outside of the Western medical setting than not. But I also would point out how many fewer moms and/or babies die in childbirth or have poor delivery outcomes in the Western world than in the third word or developing nations. But by the same token, I don't either entirely support the medical, institutionalized birth. I've said this before on here, that I dislike the assembly line, everyone gets an epidural at 4 cm, everyone delivers in lithotomy kind of birth, which we do because it makes us feel as practitioners like we're more in control of a chaotic process. But the truth is, I think it often leaves us less in control. I got in so much trouble for deviating from that standardized delivery, but I really felt like everyone was better for it, including me. As I told my patients time after time, my philosophy was this: look, it's your birth, your body, and your baby; I'm just here to keep everybody safe. So, within reason, we'll do this however you want it. Which involved any number of things, even in my short career - backrubs, perineal massage, mineral oil, olive oil, music, Wiccan sand circles, I delivered babies with their moms in pretty much any position they could come up with, and once or twice I was more or less on my back.

Interesting, isn't it, that as much as they complained about my "avoiding" the OR, the only time they commented on how I jumped in on the labor deck was to tell me I was somehow doing it wrong...

Anyhow. The bigger point is, I loved labor and delivery.

So there was this woman on the Freebirthing show who had this completely amazing delivery. It was a water birth (one thing I haven't done, partly because we didn't have the facilities, partly because it yicks me out), and wow, it was so peaceful. There was no screaming and raving and wailing. She just let things happen, accepted them as they came. She claimed it was more or less pain-free, which, I think that depends on your definition of "pain-free" (i.e., I've seen plenty of women control a reasonable level of labor pain with meditation and self-hypnosis). But it was just entrancing to watch. She was nearly silent through the whole thing. And her baby came out, sweet, beautiful, and didn't cry. I, of course, got worried, and apparently she did too, but the kid was breathing just fine. I guess he just didn't have a lot to say. She interpreted this as him being "relaxed", and I'm not sure I disagree with that. The whole thing was completely beautiful. The only thing I would've done differently (aside from being somewhere less than 500 feet from a functional OR) is that her husband didn't touch her the whole time, apparently to protect himself from some British law regarding unlicensed attendants at a birth. Which is sort of sad.

Still. Would it kill you to have a midwife on hand?

The other program I watched was on the "pregnant man." That was a lot more productive. I still don't consider him a pregnant man (uterus = not a pregnant man), but I really support what they did, and I can see his point. I had a lot more respect for them after I saw the program. They seemed like a sweet family. I really appreciated the wife's efforts to breastfeed. I did think it was sort of interesting how quickly they seemed to fall into traditional gender roles. They seem like they have been (the wife has two daughters from a previous marriage) and will be good parents (which is fortunate, because there's another one on the way), and really, can you ask for anything more than that? Everybody's family is different. Everybody's parents screw them up. And the show was an interesting and compassionate commentary on the issues that transgendered couples face. Plus, that kid's adorable. And, I do not envy any boy who comes sniffing around her in 15 years or so - she is so going to be daddy's little girl!

I did get two very amusing quotes out of today's TV watching extravaganza, though. The first, from the stupid Lifetime movie:

"Your son is looking at porn on the internet!"
"That's nice, honey. G'night."
(which, incidentally, was the correct response, at least initially. You know, before he developed his big porn addiction and started lying and stealing and the whole world came catastrophically crashing down...in typical Lifetime fashion...)
And, care of Dr. Huxtable...

"Regional forecast...warm, and no babies."

If I was an OB, I'd so totally steal that (hmm...maybe I can still make it work...)

Okay, yeah, I'm done babbling...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Told you so...

(Also, the verification word is "quagman".)

Anonymous said...

The no crying thing bothers me.

Anonymous said...

FTR:
The woman you want to smack has a blog-
http://motheringchoices.blogspot.com/

She lost me on her post about induction, but I thought you might be interested.

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