Awaiting the Chop

Feeble sunlight trickled through the dew-drenched windows. The patients were finishing their breakfasts. The medical student wiped the sleep from his eyes and followed the team into the next room.

“Dr. Randall, Mr. Jackson hears better on his left side”, the house officer volunteered the hard-won knowledge to his consultant. “Or should that be: worse on his right…”.

“Hello, Mr. Jackson.” Dr. Randall spoke with the uncommitted voice of a doctor trying to ensure a patient wakes up and responds, whilst trying not to startle him too much.

Mr. Jackson half-sniffed. His wrinkled eyelids stayed shut.

Dr. Randall paused before lightly grasping Mr. Jackson’s right elbow and with a gentle rocking motion loudly chirped, “Mr. Jackson, good morning!”

Mr. Jackson tilted his head back with a slight twist and a yawn, his eyes opened to a squint and he looked down his nose to see a young smiling geriatrician crouched at his bedside.

“Oh, morning is it?” Mr. Jackson replied, as if speaking over the din of the happy hour crowd at his local pub.

“Yes, good morning. I’m Dr. Randall, your geriatrician.”

“Electrician?”, Mr. Jackson shouted back in surprise.

“No, no, I’m a doctor who looks after the elderly”, Dr. Randall spoke as loud as he could manage without an outward show of strain.

Mr. Jackson’s quizzical facial expression was unchanged despite the clarification. The rest of the team stood silently behind Dr. Randall, half-awake but preparing for a long consultation.

“Well, I read in your notes that the urology doctors have already seen you this morning. What did they say?”. Dr. Randall was now bellowing at his patient. Yesterday the geriatrics team asked the urologists to give their opinion on what to do about an unsightly mushroom-like growth on Mr. Jackson’s penis.

“Who?” Mr. Jackson was probably the only patient on the ward who had not heard the question.

“The urology doctors!” Dr. Randall shouted desperately.

“Urology?”, Mr. Jackson shouted back with equal force.

“Yes!”, the geriatrician’s face was turning plethoric and had become grotesquely ridged by distended vessels.

“Oh them, they looked at my whatsit.” Mr. Johnson pointed between his legs.

“Yes, that’s right”. The words leaked from Dr. Randall’s mouth like air escaping from a deflating balloon. The last breakfast trays were taken away. Dr. Randall summoned up all his reserves for the final push.

“What did they tell you?”

“What?”

“WHAT DID THE UROLOGY DOCTORS TELL YOU?!”, a fountain of saliva sprayed from the doctor’s mouth.

“Who?”

“THE DOCTORS WHO LOOKED AT YOUR WHATSIT!”

“Oh them”, Mr. Jackson folded his arms.

What did they tell you?”

“You’re going to have to speak up. I’m a little hard of hearing you know”, Mr. Jackson leaned towards the exasperated and wilting doctor.

“WHAT – DID – THEY – SAY!”

“What did they say?… They said… they’re going to chop my knob off!”

Mr. Jackson’s voice echoed around the still ward. Everyone was wide awake.

“Half of us are blind, few of us feel, and we are all deaf.”
- Sir William Osler

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About Chris Nickson

An oslerphile suffering from a bad case of knowledge dipsosis. Key areas of interest include: emergency medicine, critical care, toxicology, tropical medicine, clinical epidemiology, history, literature and the internet-learning revolution. @precordialthump | + Chris Nickson | Contact

Comments

  1. Jabulani says:

    Oh that’s HILARIOUS. I love old people; they can teach you so much about how we younger folk take life w-a-y too seriously!!

  2. James says:

    There are many similar stories I’m sure. Where did this take place?

  3. James -- it’s from way back in Aotearoa.

  4. SeaSpray says:

    Hi Chris -- I am sorry for the elderly man ..but the way you tell that story ..HILARIOUS!!

    Seems like he has a good attitude about things… or by that age one just goes with the flow..no pun intended.

    As you read ..I’ve been on the other end of the person unable to hear well and it is extremely frustrating… and funny. It must be so hard on the hearing impaired because I imagine people give up and avoid conversations too.

    Great story!

    Thanks for the invite to read it. I hope it’s alright with you that I am linking this post as my current post. I am also linking your blog to my emergency physician section.

    I was laughing out loud at this and this post was my first official laughs of the day! :)

    Have a great day!

    P.S. I enjoy your comments in Dr S’ blog. You guys can do intellectual circles around me ..but I hang in there ..take a breather ..go back ..always challenging/interesting/frustrating/sometimes infuriating-exasperating reads. :)

  5. SeaSpray says:

    I fixed the link.

    Thank you :)

  6. Thanks for taking the time to comment, SeaSpray.

    Patients are incredible -- I’m always amazed at how unpredictable people’s reactions can be. Part of my fascination with this, I think, is that we will all be patients someday (short of sudden death) and I often wonder how I would be in the same situation.

    All the best,
    Chris

    BTW -- the link to SeaSpray’s story in reaction to this post is:
    http://seaspray-itsawonderfullife.blogspot.com/2009/06/what.html

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