After long planning, my family of four finally got our feet on the airplane. I was flying to China and then Singapore for the 19th International Research Congress to present my research. I was happy that my family could join me for that.
The food was tolerable; drinks were still free and the children were behaving. I was watching movies with periodically daydreaming about sitting in a first class seat...
Suddenly, the movie stopped, replaced by an announcement: "all passengers, if you are a medical doctor, please let us know. We need help."
I looked around, and hesitated. It was not a US company flight. The cabin was quiet. "maybe everything is ok now." I thought.
Then, I heard the announcement again. I took a deep breath, explained to my husband and kids, and stood up like a hero going to a war.
"I am a nurse and a nurse practitioner, can I help?" I introduced myself.
After giving the crew my name and work place, I was led to front cabin washroom. A middle age man was moaning and curled up on the floor. He is the co-pilot. He started experiencing nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and sever abdominal pain about 30 minutes ago.
After obtaining necessary history and exam, I believe he suffered acute gastroenteritis likely from left over food he ate last night at home. A crew member communicated to the ground doctors about my assessment. He then asked me: "Do you think we have to land now? The closest airport was Anchorage, Alaska."
"Alaska? I have to decide?" I felt my body was heating up, and my breath was deeper. I am on an airplane! Luckily, I quickly calmed dawn. I assessed the patient again and checked the first aid kits available. I was happy that they have decent supplies of equipments and medicines.
I decided that he was stable enough to stay on. I was told I could give him iv gravol and iv fluid and repeat if needed. Before I could ask any questions, the ground doctor hung up. Gravol, what is that? I got my palm pilot out and found out it was Canadian brand name for dimenhydrinate. Talking about bring the resources with you!
The crew members helped me getting the patient up to the small and dark cabin that the pilots use to rest. The ceiling is about 4 feet tall. It has two chairs and a roughly full size bed. Both sides and the foot of the bed are against the walls.
The patient lay down with his feet in. I kneel on the floor and could barely see his face. He closed his eyes and moaned all the time. I've been teaching and working as a NP for the last few years. I haven't started an iv for a while.
Despite my nervousness, the instability of the plane and patient's reluctant to keep the arm straight, I was able to insert the catheter easily under a flush light. It took me longer time to figure out how to get the inlet out and connect the tubing because they were not US brand supplies.
Then I found there were no places that I could hang the iv bag! After being creative, handy and didn't have to break the air tight plane, I finally hung the bag on top of the ceiling by using rubber bands and gloves...I pushed the medicine.
The patient felt a little better about 20 minutes after he got the medicine and the fluid. I felt exhausted. It was around 2 am Eastern standard time. We were still 4-5 hours away from landing. I gave him another dose of dimenhydrinate and total 1500 ml of normal saline. He was stable and somewhat comfortable through out the journey. I stayed with him all the time, held his hand, and talked to him.
We landed in China on time. I talked to the local doctors in Chinese and told the patient where he would go and answered all his questions. By then, he was able to sit up, get dressed, shake hands with me and thank me.
He told me that was the first time he saw my face. He said my soft voice and the hand held got him through. It doesn't matter that you and your patient shared different culture background and nationalities, your patient can feel your heart.
I am proud to give my heart and share my skills and knowledge. The crew members treated me like a hero and gave me bottle of wine as a souvenir. It's just a little taste of first class. I shared my wine with my family and friends in China while I proudly shared my "heroic" experience with them.
We always say: once a nurse, always a nurse, no matter where and when. I had done some nursing rescue in supermarket, subway. But I had never thought that my first international nursing experience would be like this. I had a chance testing my knowledge and skills. I am proud to be a nurse and nurse practitioner.
When i came back to the us, i found the airline company rewarded me 10,000 flight miles. It feels nice that my work is acknowledged.
Wow that was great!! Must have felt really good being able to save him!
I had the same experience. The pilot called for a doctor and no one would get up...so i did...and i was just a nursing student in my FIRST semester!! i still fetl compelled to do so....
there was a woman laying on the floor, extrememly pale, back around her eyes...and i had seen her freaking out in the airport because of some baggage problem...
i felt her pulse and there was one...and i asked what she had eaten, and it wasn't that, i knew it was probably stress and really low blood pressure...
and i didn't know what to do.
what could i have done?
quote from end of air rn,
by maxiaochen
"when i came back to the us, i found the airline company rewarded me 10,000 flight miles. it feels nice that my work is acknowledged."
______________________________________________________________
i loved your story, and the way you expressed your heroic action so humbly - however the reward from the airline is the same as one given someone else who posted elsewhere. she volunteered after no doctor stood up on a flight wherein someone was seriously ill (cad, i think).
after she gave the appropriate meds the man had with him, and he stabilized somewhat, an announcement was made that any doctor responding would get free airline tickets for himself (and i think a companion - it's been a while). about 5 docs responded immediately. what's wrong with that picture? they each got the free tickets, while the nurse got 10,000 miles, as you did.
i suppose 'twill ever be thus. we knew our incomes would be less than docs....
that doesn't bother me. it's just when "service above and beyond...." is compensated unequally, that i feel the burn.
thank you so much for sharing your bravery, especially since (i guess) you're of
chinese heritage and could have been criticized; but you knew that you might be able to communicate with the patient, and overcame any hesitation. when i was in china 25 years ago, nurses weren't acknowledged as having much ability. i'd sure like to know more about you.
It's happened to me twice. Both were in US airspace. The first time was a man with 4 other male family members that were flying to Las Vegas... he was 3 months postop open heart. Cardiac Doc had not given permission to fly, medical doctor said (he stated) OK. He had started bleeding from the nose. Blood sugar high and SOB...pale. After nobody responded, I stood up.... asked for O2 and the flight attendants busted a gut to help me. I wanted to put O2 on 4 liters... The flight attendant said it was on... I said put it on 4 liters... she said it was on... They only have off and wide open... anyway another nurse came to assist me. He aid that he needed to have a bowel movement. Both of us nurses said NO....We got to land 15 minutes early. No reward... I still felt great though.
The second was a food poisoning and they helped me alot and I was grateful. I got 12,500 miles for amost nothing except an assessment. We landed early on that flight as well. I will continue to help and can appreciate the first posters position, bless her heart. All eyes are on you. Keep up the great work to show that WE ARE PROFESSIONALS.
Wow that was great!! Must have felt really good being able to save him!I had the same experience. The pilot called for a doctor and no one would get up...so i did...and i was just a nursing student in my FIRST semester!! i still fetl compelled to do so....
there was a woman laying on the floor, extrememly pale, back around her eyes...and i had seen her freaking out in the airport because of some baggage problem...
i felt her pulse and there was one...and i asked what she had eaten, and it wasn't that, i knew it was probably stress and really low blood pressure...
and i didn't know what to do.
what could i have done?
You were quite courageous to volunteer assistance. However unless you worked as an LPN or aide before going to nursing school, your knowledge of the appearance patients have when ill with specific diseases, was too limited
for you to be helpful. Don't berate yourself for what you didn't know. You cared enough to risk, for someone else!
That shows true nursing aptitude.
Remember how doctors were encouraged to volunteer, from another post: They were offered a free flight....then 5-6 got out of their seats to help.....
More questions needed to be asked, such as, have you got diabetes? Use her testing kit if she has it......
Have you ever felt like this before? What happened then?
What fluids did you drink today? (She could have been dehydrated if her "pale back behind her eyes" were sunken.) If she was unable to drink, an IV would have been needed and you'd have to tell the pilot to set down at the nearest airport.
Did she have chest pain? Have you ever had a heart attack? System by system assessment was needed while the pilot found a nearby airport in a community with an acute care hospital.
Have you got a headache? Where? If she points to the top (where a cap would be worn) of her head, she could have hypertension..... leading to stroke. Pain at the temples signifies a tension headache.
What made you think she had low blood pressure? Was her pulse weak, thready, very slow?
Clearly you were over your head, and needed more help. Once someone responds to a call like that, other professionals relax, stay put and let whoever answered do the work. They needed to ask if another nurse was on board and offer him/her a free flight for volunteering to help....... I hate to say it, but sometimes only monetary rewards get what's needed.
Good job in a challenging situation!
On an NPR interview with Diane Rheem this morning, an author talked about his book on survivors and what distinguishes them from others. According to his research, staying cool and not freezing (or overreacting) was the essential factor in a crisis situation. Only about 10% of the population has this instinct--including our essayist here, it seems. (80% of us just freeze and don't do anything; another 10% of those in crisis situations overreact and cause more harm than good.)
As a new nurse, I would like to thank you. It is experiences like yours that does the heart good and confirms that you chose the right path.
I was told by an experienced nurse that you can go through months of running behind, having to work over, being stretch from one end of of the hall to the other and somedays it might also involve a doctor that is "unsatisfied" with something that was or wasn't done. BUT, it only takes one time, during those months, for one patient to say, "Thank you", or for a patient to fill out the comment form and say that this nurse took good care of me, to make it all worth it. :heartbeat
ShifraPuah
73 Posts
You were absolutely kick-$$$!!! Woohoo!