It’s 4am, I woke up to the usual beep, beep, beep. I do my best to roll over- a failed attempt but I
know if get the air out my line I can go back to sleep. But then I see the
screen “end of infusion”. It’s 4am in the morning and I am confused. Until I
realise that my TPN wasn’t actually changed last night, after being hung there
since 8pm the day before. Another mistake to add to the ever growing list. Why
wasn’t it changed? Because my Mum and Jamie were so busy trying to comfort me
through the pain I was in after having to attempt to flush my JEJ that Mum
forgot to remind the nursing staff. They were too busy trying to get a doctor on the ward to get me more pain relief. To
then discover I actually in fact had strong pain relief written on my drug card
that I could have been given instantly. There goes another mistake.
It shouldn’t be our job to remind the nursing staff of every
single thing they have to do, right down to which central line to hook my TPN
up to. This is their job, the job they are paid to do. I am under their ‘care’.
Well, if this is care I am very worried what a lack of care looks like.
I am reaching a point where this is not only affecting my
health, but also the health of the loved ones surrounding me, because they are
filled with dread at waking up each morning and hearing what mistake has been
made next. This is hospital for crying out loud and a nurse couldn’t even
reassure my poor Mum I was safe. When asked outright “is Chloe safe on this
ward?” She simply replied “I’m sorry I can’t answer that question.” It fills
you with hope and confidence I am receiving the proper care and attention I
DESERVE doesn’t it?
So, as a family we have made a decision. We are going home.
Forget diagnostics right now, forget curing the problem. Because honestly? This
is so complex it might never be cured. For our own sanity and mental health, my
family need me in a place they know I am safe from harm, medication errors,
poor hygiene, lack of staff knowledge and total breakdown in communication. So
that I can be in a place where I feel safe and my anxiety levels are
significantly decreased. I place I feel able to be myself, and not be scared of
who is going to do something detrimental to my health next. Because that is
honestly the point we have reached. I do not feel safe under the care of this
hospital, and my family do not feel that I am safe and well treated under the
care of this hospital. Going home is not a straight forward procedure right
now, but one that somehow we are going to make happen.
This admission not a single thing has been done to help my
mobility, and when I think about the fact that I actually cannot walk at all,
the sick feeling inside builds up. Whether that is grief for the movement I
have lost, anger or sadness I do not quite know. What I do know is that I am in
a hospital, and what I have found is that they find it incomprehensible how to
treat more than one significant problem in one go. They seem to have no ability
to get more than one team together and discuss how my body is working on a
whole, instead they focus on one problem (usually nutrition because it is what
keeps me alive) and the rest are left to deteriorate. My legs do not move at
all anymore. I cannot even wiggle my toes. I try and send the signals but it gets
me nowhere. Instead I am in constant agonising pain, especially in my legs but
all over. This pain wears me down both physically and emotionally, to the point
where I won’t even let my Mum hug me, because I am scared it will hurt too
much. To the point where I have to have IV morphine just to move in bed. But
the hospital cannot cover ‘rehabilitation physiotherapy’ as an inpatient. This
is something that has to be done as an outpatient in the community, and
therefore another reason why I need
to get home, because the longer my legs are left- the worse they are going to
get. The longer the nerves are left without signals and only feeling pain, the
more they are going to forget the signals and all hope will be lost.
If I were at home, yes I would be bed bound most the time,
but I would have my animals and my family surrounding me, I would have all my
belongings and plenty to keep me occupied. My book writing is going incredibly
well and I would love to work on that more. But this place drains me of life
and energy. I stare at this little room day in and day out. On the rare occasion
I am allowed to leave the ward, I dare not in fear that we will miss someone
important or a decision being made. We have to be on the ball 24/7. That’s
draining in itself.
We are all at a point of disbelief that 1) I am in this
situation but 2) that you have to fight SO hard for care. I truly feel for
those who don’t have a family to back them up, or the elderly who can’t voice
their opinions and pick up on errors in the same way we do.
So, maybe home is the answer. It shouldn’t have to be, but
we are human and we need a break.
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