Hi All,
Medical appointments are usually pretty boring (except for getting poked or probed, or otherwise physically abused ), but this morning was different. I was just there for a followup to discuss the results of a fasting blood test, and while a nurse was taking my pulse, she suddenly looked concerned, quickly wrote down a number on her form, told me she'd be back in a few seconds, and quickly left. I got up to see what she had written down, and it was "44"
Sure enough, in a few seconds she was back, with one of those oxygenation meters that clips onto the end of a finger, and she didn't waste any time clipping it onto one of my fingers. You should have seen the look of relief on her face, when it showed 98 % oxygenation, and a normal heart rate.
But before I left, the nurses had the last laugh. My PCP requested another blood test that he had forgotten to include with the first go-round, and when I stopped at the lab, naturally the nurse couldn't find a vein. She poked and probed in my arm for probably somewhere around 8 to 10 minutes, before finally giving up and going to get her supervisor, who only took a few seconds to hit a gusher in the other arm. Obviously, practice makes perfect.
Or maybe they just ganged up on me to get even with me for giving the other nurse a scare
Tex
A Little Humor During My PCP Appointment This Morning
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A Little Humor During My PCP Appointment This Morning
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
Practice indeed, does make perfect, Tex! I don't no anyone in their right mind who would allow this nurse (as in me), who has not drawn blood in years to come near them with a needle. It is usually the med assistants and techs who are doing it these days anyway because most doctors cannot afford to employ a nurse.
Jane
Diagnosed with Lymphocytic Colitis 12/19/12
"When it gets dark enough,you can see the stars."
Charles A. Beard
Diagnosed with Lymphocytic Colitis 12/19/12
"When it gets dark enough,you can see the stars."
Charles A. Beard