Skip to main content

ADVENTURES IN UNPAID INTERNING: EXODUS

 INTRODUCTIONS AND CONFUSIONS


My work at Ponyx Hospitals began on the 14th of October, this year. I was a bit late for handing over because I had to search for a decent outfit to wear seeing as I could not tend to patients in jeans and a polo. It was quite the morning work run as I had to return to the store after forgetting to pick up the items I purchased- It was when I got to the hospital gates did I realize my folly, so imagine the long-winded trip back and forth and then back again.  

The shift went by smoothly. I got a tour around the premises from the matron(Again, a charming woman) and my two work partners: Nurse F and Nurse U(For privacy and my safety, I'll be using initials when referring to my patients and colleagues). They were much obliged to take a student under their tutelage; with half the week spent answering the nagging questions of "why I was studying nursing?" or my correcting the patients that I was their nurse and not the doctor on duty whenever I walked into their rooms for vitals checking. It was more from the fact that my stature(find synonym)-height, size and receding hairline-made it hard for people to believe I was a male nurse rather than the knowledge that I was just that, a male nurse. I remember the ENT doctor telling me of a trend by male nurses who acquire jobs on rigs and in oil companies and go about answering 'doctor' while on duty. It might be the reason she kept calling me "doc" during the Adeno-tonsillectomy I assisted her in(By assist, I switched on and off the suction machine. That wasn't very doctor-y of me).


PREGNANCIES AND QUARTER-LIFE CRISIS.


A week later, I would come to witness the miracle that is birth. Imagine my excitement by the prospects of finally catching such a delicate procedure, which I could not see during my hospital postings in school because for some unexplainable reason; I always got posted at the medical ward of my school's teaching hospital(DAMN YOU SAMBO). Although I was not allowed to do a vaginal examination(it's basically fingering minus the horniness) because I was not a certified "mid-husband", I did get to perform a fetal heart check on the mother with the device they had. I gotta say, hearing those fast beats as they chug like a moving train was as scary as it was terrific.


The baby came, later the next morning with his umbilical cord around the head(wrung twice). He had a mild case of asphyxiation, which was duly corrected by the able hands of my co-nurses(Nurses F and U). One thing threw me off from the whole experience. Neither mother nor baby cried, at all, except for a few whimpers from the mother's end but that should not have been the case because the woman was on an oxytocin infusion to help with the weak contractions she had which should be enough to make her scream her lungs out. But all we got was a short grunt here, and a restless disposition there. Even the sharp cries of a newborn as the air gets pushed into the lungs for the first time was not heard, probably because of the cord around its neck but still, there were no screams...only blood(I have cancelled the pregnancy from my memory banks). 


In the following week, there was another pregnancy which was Cesarean, and I missed it(instant depresun). Both baby and mother were in perfect health, so that's a good thing. Another thing that gave me instant depresun was the age of the mother. She was 23, my age. Here was a lady my age starting a family with her equally young husband, while I was still living in my mother's spare room(although my clothes stay in the place, I can't necessarily call it my room seeing as family relatives tend to displace me from there whenever they spend the night). Her folder read "Occupation: Banker", which meant she was working and judging from the room she stayed in(A private room with a bathroom and wardrobe), her company's HMO(Google it) could afford it. I was happy for her, no doubt. Still, the idea of her already settling down at that age made me question my existence and the direction my life is heading: I am not a graduate nor getting paid and still dependent on others. Not that I need to rush my life, but am I the only one who feels their time move slow? 



IM INJECTIONS AND FREAK-OUTS


It's a new week, and I'm back to work after the shift I had for five nights straight(it was boring, no deaths or surgeries. The only "eventful" thing about the shift was my diarrhoea). Coming back I've realized how much I dislike these morning shifts: Waking up early to meet up with handing overs can be stressful and there is also the matter of me wanting to miss out of the hospital's morning prayers(call me devil, I don't care. There's just something about standing among others, singing praises as you try to avoid eye contact by staring at ante-natal posters on the wall). 

Morning shifts are also hectic, as in working in the out-patient department; checking vitals, directing patients to consult rooms and laboratories for tests, and administering IM injections(Ah... IM injections). Whenever I give that injection, I get this sinking feeling that I may have injected the medicine into the wrong site. Still, my calculations are always correct: I divide the buttocks(I have seen so many butts these few days) into four quadrants and inject the substance at the farthest point of the upper quadrant, but I still feel like I didn't do it accurately. My only means of knowing that I did it correctly is that the patient neither complains of excessive pain nor starts limping strangely. Plus the fact that the site doesn't bleed out profusely, which gives me peace of mind and I am super calm when injecting that shit like my hands don't shake at all... I have the peaceful mind of a serial killer. 


Well, shit, I've written way too much already. Guess I'm going to make this a three-parter(Is that even a thing?). Please tune in next time for more Clinic matters with me, your narrator, Ebube. 


PS Is it weird to love the smell of methylated spirit? Like I get a sort of high from it. I'm just saying.


Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

THE THING ABOUT BEING 23, 5FT 11 AND 100KG

     You are tall. Granted. However your size distracts people from your almost dominating height( scoffs ,  not that dominating)      You'd wish you were taller. But that would need you to put a bit of effort into your physical appearance, and you just don't give a damn.       And even when you do try to keep fit - 1km or 2km runs, light push-ups and sit-ups- you begin this ritual of staring at your half-naked self in the mirror after every 'uncompleted' work out.        On the days you do notice changes, you feel a deep sense of accomplishment. You raise your wobbly shoulders and suck in your tummy, almost willing the abs to show( They do not ).      Biceps are subtly bulging, chest getting pumped, and stomach not showing in your tight T-shirts. But everything changes when you drink water( LMAO )      It vexes you when people see your face and instantly believe you have a wife and ...

FEMINISM IS... DRIVING A BIG RED TRUCK.

       I know a woman. She drives a big red truck. Whenever she takes the truck out for a drive, no matter where she goes, people tend to look at her. Some stare out of awe from the beauty and sheer size of the machine. Some stare out of jealousy as they wish to be in the driver's seat of this vehicle. Some stare out of some preconceived notion that a woman should not be driving such a magnificent car. Each reason comes with its own distinct stare and I laugh anytime I see these things because they don't know the struggles that came before the acquisition of such a splendid ride so they only judge by what they see on the surface - A woman driving a big red truck.      There's nothing special in women driving. Honestly. They still have to obey traffic laws, they still need to pay tolling bills, they still check all their mirrors before backing out of the driveway and they still need to update their license every now and then. So what's the big deal abou...

BE AS SALT(ED)

It was corn season and on one fateful evening, my mother (A/N: This woman really needs to start paying me for making her my muse in most of my articles) decided to go out in search of roasted corn and pear or ubé in our dialect. After driving through various streets- seeing as that was where most vendors took up shop as a result of the lockdown of the markets in the state- we came across an elderly woman who took up a small space in front of an electronics/furniture shop. She really didn't stick out like the other sellers nearby but merely looking at her, you could tell that her roasted corn would be nice and without much surprise they were. I love roasted corn, but I always wondered what made them so sweet when the process only involved setting raw corn on a charcoal stove and giving it time to roast. On eating the corn, my mother made an observation, that they reason, why the old lady's corn was tasty, was that she soaked the raw corns in a bowl of saltwater befor...