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Authors: Jennifer Worth

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BOOK: In the Midst of Life
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The morning had been hectic with, as usual, a shortage of staff, too many duties, and too little time in which to get them done: dressings to change; a drip to install; blood to take; patients to prepare, take to, and return from therapy; the drugs to take round and DDAs to check; a couple of admissions; a patient discharged, with her drugs and treatments to organise and explain to the daughter who was collecting her; the linen arriving from the laundry; someone needing catheterisation; another a bath which
he could not manage himself. Morning coffee had been disrupted by three or four radium patients vomiting; the telephone ringing, with a message from dispensary – a drug was available, could a nurse come and collect it? But why could the dispenser not send it up to the ward? They were too busy, the woman said. Does no one ever imagine that the ward is too busy? As we had needed the drug badly for two days, I sent a nurse to get it. And in the rush of work the oncologist – the Chief, we called him – arrived to see a new patient.

He found me in a side ward, washing the mattress of a patient who had died during the night.

‘This is a surprise, Sister. Haven’t you got a nurse or an orderly to do that sort of thing?’

All the nurses are busy, and one orderly is off sick. Anyway, a sister should never be too grand to do the menial tasks. I want this room for Mr Waters because I don’t want him to die in the main ward if it can possibly be avoided – it’s unsettling for the other patients. None of them see themselves getting to that state.’ I cleaned the sides of the mattress. ‘There, it’s done now, and I’m with you.’

Together we went to the bedside of the new patient. Hospital protocol required that I should stay with the consultant whilst he remained in the ward, but Hannah appeared in the doorway with her ‘dinners is hup, Sister’, and a look of command on her heavy features.

‘Then I had better not delay you, Sister,’ the Chief said. ‘We will be doing the full ward round tomorrow morning.’

I walked swiftly to the kitchen, to the ward orderly in pink, the half circle of nurses in blue, each holding a tray, the electric food trolley plugged into the wall, waiting my attention. It had always seemed extraordinary to me that the serving of patients’ dinners occupied such a large part of a sister’s duties (the whole process took the best part of an hour), and that all nursing staff looked to her for the lead. It was a relic of the old days, when drugs and surgery were in their infancy, and when so many people who came into hospital were chronically malnourished, so that the dietary needs of each patient were
important.

I tucked the tea towel into my belt to protect my uniform from gravy splashes, and removed the aluminium lids from each container. I served a full dinner for several patients, which the nurses took, returning a few minutes later with empty trays.

‘Take this to Mrs J. and see that she can manage. Stay with her, if necessary.’

‘Yes, Sister.’

‘Mr P. doesn’t like carrots, so give him this one.’

‘Yes, Sister.’

‘Special diabetic diets for Mrs D. and Mrs H. Don’t get them mixed up, Nurse.’

‘No, Sister.’

‘There’s enough left over for the walking patients in the day room. Take it through to them please, Nurse, and see if anyone wants seconds.’

Yes, Sister.’

‘And Nurse…’

She turned, her voice bright and buoyant. ‘Sister …?’

Your cap is incorrectly folded. Attend to it before the afternoon, please.’

Her smile vanished, and her mouth tightened.

Yes, Sister,’ she muttered.

I knew just how she felt, having spent all my early nursing years kicking against the rules and regulations, but discipline had to be maintained …

The routine continued like clockwork, I, hopefully, remembering everyone’s needs and fancies. But one thing I never forgot whilst serving lunches was the mayhem I had caused one dinner time when I was a student nurse.

I was eighteen, nervous and clumsy, awkwardly trying to do my best, and failing at every attempt
-
every ward sister’s nightmare. I felt like a fish out of water in the rigid female hierarchy.

The sister of the ward on which I worked required a cannula that she did not have, and asked me to go to another ward to see if one might be borrowed. Filled with the importance of my commission I walked quickly (we were
never
allowed to run!) to
Sister Collins’ ward. It was lunchtime, and no one was in sight. Assuming that the sister would be serving lunches I rushed eagerly into the kitchen. Sister and Staff were not there, but the food trolley was. The porters had left it crosswise to the kitchen door, which I was not expecting. I rushed in, and my whole body collided with it, causing the trolley to topple over and hit the floor. Dinners – meat and gravy, fish in white sauce, potatoes, cabbage, carrots, rice pudding, prunes, egg custard, stewed apple, jelly –
everything
shot across the kitchen floor and slithered under the sink. Horrified and rooted to the spot, I gazed at the scene. The trolley wheels turned slowly in the air; I turned and ran – yes, ran! – from the ward. Still no one was about, no one had seen me enter the ward or leave, so no one could possibly associate me with the disaster. Once round the corner, I slowed to a fast walk and went to another ward to request the loan of the cannula required by my ward sister. An hour later, in the nurses’ dining room, everyone was talking about the extraordinary upturning of a hospital food trolley full of dinners. I could never serve dinners without thinking of this, and if nurses saw me smiling, or heard me giggling quietly to myself, they must have wondered why …

After lunch I went to the male ward to supervise the moving of Mr Waters to the side ward. Not before time, I thought; that dreadful cough had been unsettling for the other men, but now his inability to cough was worse. Phlegm bubbled and rattled in his chest. Struggling with asphyxia, Mr Waters would die as hard as a man can die, unless drugs were given. I pulled the curtains around his bed and used suction to try to remove the excessive fluid bubbling up from his lungs.

‘I’m sorry about this beastly sucker, but it will make you feel better,’ I said, trying to avoid his panic-stricken eyes. His lungs were struggling under some terrible oppression and breathing was an intolerable strain. Any respiratory death is distressing to watch, but a natural anodyne – a sudden dimming of consciousness due to oxygen starvation of the higher centres of the brain – comes at
the peak of suffering, and mental and physical deterioration descends as swiftly as a hawk dropping on its prey.

‘Mr Waters, we think you would be better off in the small room. It has two windows, and they can both be open all the time. It will make your breathing easier,’ I said softly. He nodded, and picked at the sheet. I was alone with him, but I could sense a figure hovering beside me. Could he see or feel this ghostly presence? None of us will know until we get there.

I had called the porters, and they arrived with a trolley.

‘I think it will be better if we move the whole bed, rather than lifting him on to a trolley, and then on to another bed,’ I said. It would be more difficult for them, because the corners were awkward, but they did not question my instructions.

Not an hour too soon, we moved him. Two days earlier he had been sitting upright in bed, leaning forward a little, his cheeks flushed, his lips tinged blue as his chest heaved tumultuously at four times the normal respiration rate. His eyes had been clear and his mind alert, as he noted people and things going on in the ward. Now the struggle to live had departed, and weariness had overtaken him.

I called a junior student nurse, and showed her how to fix up the oxygen and the sucker, and how to use them, and explained the details, which were so much better than ten years previously when I had been a student nurse. I told the girl (she was barely more than a child, with fresh features and the downy skin of youth) to stay with the dying man whilst I went to fetch the injections. What huge responsibility we place upon a nurse’s shoulders, I reflected, as I went to the dangerous drugs cupboard. So often they come straight from school, the classroom, the hockey field or the gym, and we expect them to remain with the dying, a task that the majority of mature people would run away from in fear and revulsion. Does this give nurses a heightened sensibility of living, to be so closely acquainted with death? Certainly, nurses always seem to be full of life and vitality, with an inexhaustible capacity for laughter. I had found in nurses none of the lethargy and self-absorption that one often noticed in young girls, contrary to what one might expect, given the nature of our
work.

Radiotherapy could not help the malign growth in Mr Waters’ lungs. It may have halted the progress of the cancer by a hair’s breadth, but it made no real impression on the inexorable course of the disease. Mr Waters had smoked himself to death, and there was nothing that medicine could do to reverse the destruction. For two days he flickered in and out of consciousness, his lungs bubbling and gurgling as he slowly drowned. But his suffering was not as great as appearances suggested, because he received devoted nursing care – and the Brompton Cocktail every four hours. His mind was not conscious of his condition, or of his surroundings, and he showed no signs of pain. We did not try to bring him back from wherever he was, by forcing him to drink this or to take that, nor any of the multifarious futilities of energetic medicine. His perceptions were so dimmed by weakness and weariness that his life was ending slowly, in a dream state, rather than in true awareness.

Each morning when I came on duty I expected to find the side ward empty, but for two mornings he was still there. How extraordinary is life, that one can hang on in that condition, neither alive nor dead? But on the third morning the room was empty, and the night nurse reported that the flickerings of life had given way to the smothering curtain of
death.

FAMILY INVOLVEMENT
 

Mr Elias Roberts had an enormous family, which seemed to expand with each passing day. They were Jamaican and had immigrated to England in the early 1950s, seeking a better life, better education, and better prospects for their children. They had stepped off the boats in their Sunday best, raw and hopeful, into an exhausted and war-torn England. A better time was a long way off. Jobs were plentiful because rebuilding Britain was a priority, but finding somewhere to live was near impossible. Mr Roberts had eventually found a single room at the top of a derelict house for himself, his wife and their two youngest daughters, but the older boys and girls had had to make their own way.

Mr Roberts was admitted to the Marie Curie Hospital suffering from prostate cancer, which had been treated by prostatectomy in the Royal Free Hospital. He had come to us for radium treatment but the widespread metastasis in the bones was clear evidence that the treatment had come too late.

When I was a young girl, I was told that men who had difficulty urinating carried a catheter coiled in their hatbands. When they needed to pass water, they catheterised themselves. At first, they would inevitably develop an infection, but the body’s immune system is built to fight that, and once these men had got over the initial bouts of infection, the body became immune to the germs lurking in the hatband.

Testing for cancer was not routine. Some men went to a doctor, but the treatment was fairly rudimentary – diuretics, potassium citrate, no alcohol, barley water – none of which was effective. Later, in the 1940s, the female hormones oestrogen and progesterone were prescribed in the hope of reducing the enlargement, but it is doubtful if these treatments did much good. Consequently, a great many men developed such massively distended bladders,
filled with retained urine, impossible to pass normally or by catheter, that abdominal entry was necessary and a supra-pubic catheter had to be inserted to drain the fluid. I was in theatre once as the ‘runner’ - the lowliest member of the team - when a man was wheeled in with a massive lump in his lower abdomen; it was his bladder. He had not been able to pass urine for weeks. It was impossible, even under anaesthetic, to get a catheter past the enlarged prostate, so a supra-pubic insertion was made and more than a gallon of urine was drained off. The man died from surgical shock.

That was an extreme case, and the worst I have seen, but a great many men had to endure weeks in bed with indwelling catheters, twenty-four-hour drainage, daily bladder irrigation, uraemia, antiseptics and antibiotics before a prostatectomy could be attempted. Sometimes I felt that the catheter in the hatband would have been the better option.

This was all embarrassing and unpleasant for a sensitive man because there were very few male nurses in the profession; so young girls almost always performed such tasks. Incidentally, nursing procedures were comparatively basic. The following is taken from Wilson Harlow’s
Modern Surgery for Nurses
(1956):

There are various means of retaining an indwelling catheter in the male urethra. A common method is to attach four pipe cleaners, or two pieces of tape, to the catheter. The ends, which should be 4—6 inches long, are then brought up and fixed to the penis by a piece of Elastoplast or bandage. A similar retainer can be constructed out of a piece of sheet rubber fitted with holes and collar studs to fasten it to the penis and catheter.

 

I do not know what humiliations Mr Roberts had been subjected to before or after the prostatectomy, but when he came into the Marie Curie, the cancer was widespread, and there was no hope of cure. Nonetheless, the Chief decided on six doses of radiotherapy to try to control the spread, and eight if the results were
favourable.

BOOK: In the Midst of Life
11.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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