If you have to ride a motorcycle, please wear a helmet.
I may have mentioned that before.
We have three patients right now who weren’t wearing helmets. Two of them are missing large sections of their skulls, and all three have ventriculostomies draining cerebrospinal fluid, trying to decrease the pressure on their brains. Their CT scans look literally like mush. They’re not dead, and they may, two months from now, leave the hospital, but I doubt if any of them will ever talk again. And there was one earlier in the week who died in the ER (at least one of the ones in the unit was completely expected to die at the scene).
We have at least seven patients who were wearing helmets. A few of them have concussions, but they should all be able to recover completely, neurologically. I think one of them lost a leg, three of them lost their spleens, one lost a kidney, they each have at least two broken bones (not counting ribs) – but that’s not much, since they can all talk. Only one of them is in the ICU.
There are some really cool-looking helmets out there. If you get one of the sleek black ones with the shiny visors, they can be much more macho than going bareheaded. And nobody looks macho with a trach.
Please wear helmets.
June 14, 2008 at 11:34 pm
Favorite line (by a long shot): And nobody looks macho with a trach.
If we’re really moving toward universal health care in this country, something’s gotta give. Not to be cynical, but we don’t have unlimited resources. I wonder how many primary care pediatrician visits could be paid for with one of those ICU stays. How many HCTZ prescriptions could be filled with one day on the vent and pressors? Tough questions to think about…
June 15, 2008 at 8:59 pm
Mmm, yes, but I’ve also been seeing lately that patients who look hopeless when they come in could actually turn out quite well, given enough time and patience – and yes, money. How can we, or worse yet, a faceless bureaucracy, judge who can survive and who can’t, or who’s worth it and who’s not?
Market forces aren’t kind, but they’re impersonal and equal. I prefer Adam Smith’s invisible hand to Big Brother’s very palpable one.
June 16, 2008 at 7:31 am
You make very good points.
I respectfully disagree with the second paragraph. In some ways, socialized medicine may be more fair than when market forces determine who has access to care.
I fear that we are moving inevitably toward a single-payer universal-health care model. As such, I’m going to continue exercising, eating healthfully, and wearing a helmet!
June 18, 2008 at 8:45 am
Please, submit this to SurgeXperiences. Thanks