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Mildly AdultUpset
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I think like I'm terrible at my job. (A rant to keep my mind clear)

I had a couple patients die at my care.
I've been told I did everything I could for them...
But sometimes, it feels like it is my fault.
I blame myself for every single one of them... (except a few when the prognosis was known to be bad.)

I am going to write some of what happened and try to accept it as my fault, because I know if I keep them inside these thoughts will fester and will suffocate me when my defenses are low.

1/ An old woman who we suspected had Listeria meningitis, she got better but then worse. I should have given her Anti-TB medication. I believe she died because I failed to give them to her at the right moment.
2/ A middle aged woman had many pathologies: myelodysplasic syndrome, diabetes, DVT, pneumonia, fever despite the trt of infection, neurological symptoms... but I think she died of PE because the dose of Inohep wasn't adequate. (I gave it to her after consulting the attending... But she was my patient and I'm afraid I messed it up.)
3/ A young man who had pneumococcal menigitis, he was intubated (thus not my unit), but I was the one prescribing the antibiotics. (He was under the care of more specialized doctors but I had to do it because it was a nightshift and they weren't present.) He died 21 days later. I keep thinking I should have checked on him and done something.

And also, there is this incident, no death happened, but I feel terrible:

On nightshifts, there's only one resident, one intern and 04 nurses for the whole sector. (Around 30-40 patients). We had a patient having a treatment that I wasn't familiar with, I asked the nurse to wait before administring it. (I had an urgent lumbar puncture to do). She misunderstood me, and gave it. It was the wrong bottle and I told her to stop once I knew she gave it. Nothing happened to the patient, but it turned out to be a huge deal because the patient's parent weren't happy. Nobody blamed me (except the the nurse, who started screaming profanities at higher ups when asked what happened.) And she was sanctioned. (mostly for the profanities but still...) I feel riddled with guilt. I should have been clearer. It was my fault for not being so.

I feel these incidents are going to haunt me forever. I'm more tolerant now, perhaps because I'm in my hypomania phase (or neutral?)... but I'm sure the moment my guards wil be down I won't be able to read what I just wrote without suffocating and just wanting to die.

I know most of you won't read, but thank you if you did. I'm sure you wouldn't want someone like me by you as a healthcare giver.
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NickyLee · 41-45
I was the Captain of the first arriving unit on a 3 vehicle accident, multiple patients with heavy entrapment. We were short staffed that day so it was just me and my driver on the rig. The driver ran to check the patient status of the 2 vehicles on the right side of the scene while I went to the 3rd, which was upside down and laying on its roof with smoke showing from the area of the engine. As i reached the drivers door I saw 2 teenagers upside down, being held in by their seat belts. As i reached into the car, gasoline had started to run down the the bottom of the car, right toward the engine bay which was only minutes from igniting, if even that long. I reached in and released the drivers seat belt and then made a split second decision that would end up being the worst Ive ever made so far in my life.

I wasn't able to reach the passengers seat belt from my limited access point on the drivers side. I had to make the decision to either go around the other side and hope i could get the door open as easily as the drivers door came open, or run back to the Engine to get an attack line to get water on the smoldering fire that was about to be fed by the gasoline running down the underside of the car, getting closer and closer to where the fire was about to ignite. I chose to tell the girl to hold on a second and id be right back.
Now typically the driver of the Engine would already have the pump in gear, ready to flow water. Since we were short staffed and still the only unit on scene, my driver had his hands full with 6 other patients, in two separate vehicles. I had no choice but to jump into the drivers seat of the engine, shift the pump into gear, then pull my attack line and stretch it out so it wouldn't kink, then run back to the Engine to charge my line with water and throttle up the motor so id have some pressure, then run back to the nozzle to attack the fire. I very quickly soaked the area of the car's engine bay where the fire was, then left the water spraying to dilute the gasoline and went for the girl in the passenger seat. By the time i had gotten back to her, she had gone unconscious. She had died from asphyxiation while being unconscious, upside down.

You're not alone. God has the ultimate plan for each one of us and unfortunately, we don't get to change his will. That decision I made will haunt me until the day I die, but that doesnt make me a bad fire officer. Dont let something that you ultimately have no control over, define how you feel about yourself.
Friendlyperson · 26-30, F
@NickyLee Oh my god... my heart broke while reading your story. I was hung up on every single word. I'm so sorry this happened to you. The guilt must have been terrible and so devastating.
Thank you for sharing your experience with me. I really appreciate it.
I'll try my best to follow your piece of advice. Thank you again.
And keep being the amazing fire officer you are. 🙏
NickyLee · 41-45
@Friendlyperson you're welcome. Thats the first time I have ever put that experience into words and only the second time sharing it.
I hope it helps out in some way.
Friendlyperson · 26-30, F
@NickyLee Oh my god... thank you for sharing this traumatic experience. It must have been terribly hard to do, so I'm really grateful. It is is inspiring that it didn't let you change what you think of yourself as a fire officer though. It should not and I'm inspired by your story. It did help a great deal.