Thursday, December 28, 2006

Evening

I saw Mark's respiratory therapist tonight and asked her to explain the protocol for him needing to be placed back on the vent at night. She said if his heart rates rises or his oxygen saturation levels get low, they place him back on the vent. Then she said matter of factly that "oh, he probably just needed to be suctioned". So, he's been on the vent three or four days (even though it's only a few hours per night) more that he needs to be because his nurses aren't paying enough attention to suction him more often? Could that be true? So, before I left I asked his nurse and the assistant to please check him more often than usual to see if he needs suctioning tonight. His doctors would really like him off the vent for good. I intend to ask his doctor about this tomorrow if he winds up on the vent again tonight.

He was still sleepy tonight during my visit. I was there from six to nine and he only woke up a few brief times and was not very responsive. He was soaked when I got there, and his fever had only been 100.4 orally. They had given him some Tylenol and when his fever came down they bathed him again.

6 comments:

Kelley said...

What, exactly, is this 'suctioning' that needs be done more often?

Anonymous said...

A goatee? Mark, you're gonna love that. Won't be the old west handlebar you and we are used to.
Sure hope you're up and out by the Spring National shoot. They're making us wear some special tee-shirt--which I'm not liking at all...be funny to see you in one over your sack coat!
Well, it don't matter--what does matter is that you keep on that road to recovery--and once you do get back on your feet you want to wine and dine that wonderful lady of yours--such devotion! I've never met her, but I feel like wineing and dining her myself--she's too good to be true! You don't let that one get away!

'Spensah'

Anonymous said...
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Christine said...

Mark has a great deal of mucous in his lungs, I guess it's something left over from the pneumonia. They put a long suction tube down his tracheotomy and suction this out, otherwise he has trouble breathing. During the day he is more able to cough it up. Yum, huh?

Chris

Christine said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Kelley said...

Ahhh...that's 'suctioning? Happily, there are other people who can be paid to suction.