Dr. Lorry ran down to radiology when he heard the code called. He never missed a chance to use his ACLS skills. He was happy to see PA Carton already running the code. It was Dr. Lorry’s patient, Mr. Darnay, in anaphylactic shock. The radiologist was fuming. Why hadn’t Mr. Darnay been premedicated? Dr. Lorry knew he had written that order.
When the dust cleared, Darnay was stabilized, and in fact, he did not have a pulmonary embolism. It looked like post-operative atelectasis after all. He did have a deep venous thrombosis in his leg.
PA Carton stood by the radiologist as he read the film on her VIP patient, Darren Charles. It would be later that night when his glucose inexplicably hit 500. The radiologist glared at her. What was with these people constantly ordering CT angios on a weekend? Did they know the cost and manpower involved?
PA Carton looked at the radiologist, whose sneer changed to surprise as he looked at the massive saddle embolism. He turned to her and said, “This is a far, far larger clot then I have ever seen before.”
It was the best of care; it was the worst of care. It was acts of wisdom; it was acts of foolishness. It was an epoch of evidence; it was an epoch of anecdotes. The patients were full code; they were DNR. It was the summer of safety and the winter of sentinel events. In short it was a hospital so like all others. TH
Jamie Newman, MD, FACP, is the physician editor of The Hospitalist, consultant, Hospital Internal Medicine, and assistant professor of internal medicine and medical history, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minn.