Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Everyone stay... in a state of panic.

The Old Spanish Trail in Tucson. Leads into Saguaro Nat'l Park, but we weren't allowed in with the baby situated in her bike trailer the way we have her.
Outside the Pima County Courthouse in Tucson. El Presidio Historic District of Tucson. Historic hotel in Tubac, AZ, a Valentine's Day surprise. We'd spent the night before at a nasty Days Inn in Tucson, where we all caught a cold. Selah had croupe, and had a really hard time staying asleep. So... Phoenix Children's Hospital, a great way to spend a Sunday afternoon. We went to urgent care hoping to get some medicine that would help the baby sleep that night. The urgent care doctor freaked out when he saw Selah's breathing, and called 911. He put on oxygen mask on her and gave her several kinds of medicine without telling us what they were first. Fire-fighters and EMT's showed up, causing the baby to panic even more, making her breathing really strained. We took an ambulance ride to the emergency room with needles, oxygen masks the whole way. We were pretty angry about the panic that the doctor had caused. It made Selah start to panic, which made her breathing more difficult. Once I finally got her to calm down, it was obvious that there had been no need to freak out like that. I did two things correctly, I stayed calm and I did not let the nurses take Selah away from me once we reached the hospital. I just wish I would have nursed her to calm her down back at the urgent care, but they wouldn't let me. Anyways, eventually she woke up from her calming snooze, and began to get a feel for her surroundings. She pulled off her oxygen monitor relentlessly. It just didn't make sense to her that her oxygen should be measured through her own big toe. We sat here for nearly three hours trying to keep Selah happy. Nowhere to crawl, nothing to chew on except nasty cords and linens. I think about a dozen people made up the medical "team" that kept popping there heads in once an hour. Nurses, doctors, techs, billing staff, etc. When we told the story to one group of people, indicating that we really didn't understand the emergency, the tech replied that at least what we went through meant job security for them. Yep, that was like pouring salt on an open wound.
Posted by Picasa I took this video as a kind of evidence, thus my factual-sounding narration.

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