We guided our
man to the waiting ambulance and helped him in the back. The paramedic on the
bus (we call ambulances a bus) had already spiked a couple of bags (he had prepared
IV solutions) and had all the equipment assembled to start an Iv on our
patient.
I got our
guy on the pram (ambulance cot) he still held the purple towel tight against
his face. I needed access to his arms to place the IVs, so I yelled for one of
the other firefighters to jump in back with us and take over that job. I needed
to fully expose his face once and only once to determine the full extent of his
injuries.
“Okay…” I
realized I had never asked his name and didn’t know what to call the patient. I
always wanted to know their name it created a slight personal bond when I could
address them by name.
“I’m sorry
what is your name sir?” “Robert, Bob.” Came a muffled reply. “Okay Bob, I’m
gonna pull the towel away just for a couple of seconds so I can see your
injuries, then my partner here is going to take over that job for you.”
I told the
other firefighter to grab one of our huge trauma dressings and be ready to slap
that thing on quickly. I got a good grip on the towel and prepared to pull it
away. I knew that the pressure he had been holding was doing a good job of controlling
the bleeding; I also knew that pulling it off was going to reopen all the
wounds to active bleeding again.
“On three,
everyone ready?” everyone nodded. “One, two, three.” I ripped the towel away. The
first thing that hits you is the acrid smell blood has and second is the visual
image. Bob had a full thick beard like a mountain man, it was slimed with thick
blood.
His face
was in horrid shape and I tried to conceal my reaction, didn’t want to panic
Bob anymore than he was already. “How bad is it?” he asked. His eyelids were
shredded and gave the appearance of diagonal window blinds like the ones that
cover a sliding patio door.
I had
agreed in my mind many years earlier to never lie to patients. I never wanted
to say things like, it will be alright, everything will be okay, or you are
going to be fine. I wouldn’t lie. Over the years I had had too many survivors
visit me and recount what they had heard while technically dead.
So I told
the truth, not bluntly, I used some caution, but I didn’t lie. I always talked
to my dead people and encouraged them to help me help them.
“Bob its
bad. That cat did a number on you.” I talked to him while I was quickly
touching his face and accessing the depth and severity of his wounds. The cat’s
claws had not only gone completely through his eyelids, but also fully through
his cheeks. I could see inside his mouth, I could see his teeth.
I won’t
tell you more that isn’t my purpose here. “Bob, I’m gonna call ahead to the
hospital and have a plastic surgeon in the emergency room when we get there. The
lacerations are bad but your eyes aren’t hurt, and the rest is repairable.”
I nodded to
the other firefighter to cover the wounds. I then went through the standard
questioning about medications, allergies, and medical history, all the while
starting two IVs and accessing his vital signs. Once Bob was stable I called
the ED and asked that a plastic surgeon be on standby for us.
I had to
know, I had to ask what the hell had happened. “Bob what the hell happened back
there?” It was a little difficult to hear him but he told the story. Seems Bob’s
kitty was an exclusively indoor cat, and that morning as he was rushing to get
the kids to school and himself off to work the cat had slipped out the door.
Bob didn’t
have time to retrieve the animal until his lunch break. When he got home he
found the wild eyed beast outside of the front door. He had opened the door in hopes
the cat would dart back in the house, but that hadn’t happened.
The terrified
feline just trembled motionless at the opening. Bob decided to just grab the
cat and put it in the house and go back to work. He bent down to get his kitty
and it had launched at his face. The cat got its front paws wrapped around his
head in a death grip and as he stumbled inside desperately trying to pry the
animal lose he tripped.
The hard
landing must have scared the cat further and it began using its rear legs like
a rototiller on a spring garden patch. Bob couldn’t free himself from the cat
for a few seconds and the onslaught was furious.
We delivered
Bob to the capable hands of the emergency department staff. I quickly found the
plastic surgeon and detailed Bob’s injuries to him.
Once back
at the station I got the final details of the story. My lieutenant explained
that the BLACK cat had to be corralled by two animal enforcement officers and
finally subdued and taken away.
We found
out months later that Bob had taken the cat back and that he had required
multiple surgeries to have his face repaired. We found ourselves regretting
haven discounted the initial call and learned that any and all emergencies are
just that until proven otherwise.
3 comments:
I can't imagine the sights you come upon at accident scenes. God bless you and other firefighters who help those in need! Your blog made me feel as if I were right there with you experiencing it all at your side.
Kathy
http://gigglingtruckerswife.blogspot.com/
Poor kitty must have been scared half out of his wits. That's a pretty wild cat scratch story though Tim. My cat is nick-named Cujo by my friends, but he usually scares people off after the first swing of the paws, and then they don't bother him any more, but this one... he really hurt Bob!
Thanks Ladies, that poor guy I really felt for him. On the other hand I hate cats, good thing I didn't have to give aid to it.
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