The universality of nursing experience became apparent to me
today. I worked with five of the D ward nurses and an American and a Khmer
doctor for three hours trying to keep a patient alive. Despite the language and
cultural differences that can often make things so difficult we worked well
together, and differences between an Australian hospital and one in Cambodia
aside, the arrest was well run. We were organised, we documented, we didn’t get
in each other’s way, we were calm and focused.
Unfortunately the patient deteriorated, we couldn’t keep a
blood pressure, we defibrillated her heart 6 times but couldn’t keep it in a
sinus rhythm, her kidneys weren’t making urine, she was fluid overloaded and
eventually she stopped breathing and her heart rate fell. After we decided not
to continue I tried to tell the nurses how well they had done. I was having
trouble dealing with feeling sad for the family, sad that we couldn’t save her and
adrenaline and shock at having expected to save her and having her die. When I
said you worked really well together today and you did a good job they said ‘ot
sabai jet’ we are not happy because we could not save her. I felt so impressed
with the way that had handled the situation, so proud of them integrating new
knowledge and skills so well, and still, I know the feeling, of putting in the
work to save someone, starting out expecting that we will and then having them
pass away. That switch of focus from focusing and concentrating on how to save
a person’s life to taking everything off and letting them go and trying to
support a grieving family has always been hard for me, I think it is for
everyone in that situation. I felt immense respect for our team, and understanding
of the fact that you can try your best and still fail to save a life, and yet trying
to reassure them I was close to tears myself.
The other difficulty here is that when deciding how much to
give the patient and how long to try and save them is that the family (of our
medical patients) have to pay for those drugs, and I never know what their
financial situation is. It can be an emotionally charged decision to decide to
stop trying to save someone, but there is a point where it becomes futile,
their heart can no longer beat, no matter what drugs you give or how many times
you defibrillate, if they have spent long enough without oxygen going to the
brain the chances of surviving with viable brain tissue are reduced. To
continue trying last ditch attempts in these situations can make you feel sure
that you have done your best, but in cases that are futile can cost the poor
and grieving family money that they could have been saved. I have no answers to
this dilemma, I wish we could treat everyone, that we could give free care, which
we had guaranteed funds and resources but that isn’t the case here. I am going to try and get the hospital agree
that patients and their families don’t have to pay for the cost of care given
during life threatening situations. While this might help for the acute
situation the reality is that many many people are going without treatment for
their medical issues because they cannot afford it.