INDEXING TITLE:
NALUDINO'S MAR (5-03)
TITLE:
"Masamang damo"
PERIOD OF MEDICAL OBSERVATION: March 2005
NARRATION:
We just discharged a patient. Someone who we thought would never see the light
of day again, considering the injuries he suffered. Here is
his story.
He arrived at the Trauma Emergency Room, in the wee hours of the morning. I was
on duty then. Two of my seniors were operating at that
time while my batchmate was doing a case of an appendectomy. He arrived with two
friends; he was holding something in his arms, looking very, very weak. I
immediately recognized this as a trauma case and I was shocked by what I saw.
What I initially thought as baggage, he was actually carrying in his arms, his
abdominal contents. I set him on the stretcher and proceeded to giving him
emergency care.
He was operated on almost immediately and was in a guarded state for almost a
week. Post op care was very tedious. The patient eventually
developed a colocutaneous fistula, and was deteriorating. His condition was not
being helped by the fact he had no relatives around. It came to a point wherein
we were told by the consultant that we may be already too late. He instructed us
to look for the relatives and inform them of the patient's condition.
From that point, we felt that we were just waiting for the inevitable.
We were all proved wrong. The patient started improving. He was eventually
sitting up, and then proceeded to ambulate.
Looking back, I can now remember the first words that the patient said to me at
the ER, "Doc, tulungan niyo ako, ayoko pang mamatay."
INSIGHTS: (discovery, STIMULUS, reinforcement) (physical, PSYCHOSOCIAL,
ETHICAL)
"Masamang damo, mahirap mamatay."a line we here every now and then, at the
Trauma-ER. We see different people, they have different attitudes, and they come
from different backgrounds. But most share the same sentiment, "ayoko pang
mamatay." We doctors are not immune. Admittedly, we all have our preconceived
notions or stereo types. However, we must transcend these stereotypes and see
the patients for what they are, at that moment. They are there because they need
our help. They are there because they entrust their lives to us. Whether or not
they are "masamang damo" or "mabangong bulaklak" it our duty to help them live.
Preconceived notions may be wrong