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‘Nice 67 y.o. male’ has brush with mortality
Published Saturday, September 19, 2009
The doctor who saw me in the ER wrote in her report: “Nice 67 y.o. male, flat affect, awake, alert and appropriate.” I had appeared with slurred speech and a balloon in my head, had driven myself to United Hospital in St. Paul, parked in No Parking, walked in and was triaged right in to a neurologist who trundled me into the MRI Space-Time Cyclotron for 50 minutes of banging and whanging, which produced a picture of the stroke in the front of my brain, so off to the Mayo Clinic I went and the St. Marys Hospital Neurology ICU and was wired up to monitors. A large day in a nice 67 y.o. man’s life.
I stayed at St. Marys for four days of tests and when I left, a neurologist shook my hand and said: “I hope you know how lucky you are.” That was pretty clear as I walked down the hall, towing my IV tower, and saw the casualties of serious strokes. Here I was sashaying along, like a survivor of Pickett’s Last Charge who had suffered a sprained wrist. My mouth felt fuzzy, but I was essentially unscathed, though touched by mortality. Which I have been on the run from for a long time. I never wanted to be a nice 67 y.o. man. I still have some edgy 27 y.o. man inside me.
But when the doctor talks about how you must go on a powerful blood thinner lest a stray clot turn your fine intellect into a cheese omelet, you must now accept being 67 y.o. and do as he says. You had intended to be a natural wonder, an old guy who still runs the high hurdles, but mortality has bitten you in the butt.
I like this hospital. St. Marys is a research and teaching hospital so you get to observe troops of young residents go by, trailing close behind Dr. Numero P. Uno, and watch them try to assume the air of authority so useful in the medical trade. The nurses, of course, are fabulous. Like many nice 67 y.o. men, I am even more awake and alert around attractive young women (though I try to be appropriate). A tall dark-haired beauty named Sarah brings me a hypodermic to coach me on self-administered shots of heparin, and without hesitation I plunge it into my belly fat. No man is a coward in the presence of women.
Garrison Keillor, The Old Scout
Nurses are smart and brisk and utterly capable. They bring some humor to the situation. (“Care for some jewelry?” she says as she puts the wristband on me.) And women have the caring gene that most men don’t. Men push you down the hall in a gurney as if you’re a cadaver, but whenever I was in contact with a woman, I felt that she knew me as a brother.
The women who draw blood samples at Mayo do it gently with a whole litany of small talk to ease the little blip of puncture, and “here it comes” and the needle goes in, and “Sorry about that,” and I feel some human tenderness there, as if she thought, “I could be the last woman to hold that dude’s hand.” A brief sweet moment of common humanity.
And that is a gift to the man who has been struck by a stroke: our common humanity. It’s powerful in a hospital. Instead of a nice linen jacket and cool jeans and black T, you are shuffling around in a shabby cotton gown like Granma in “Grapes of Wrath,” and you pee into a plastic container under the supervision of a young woman who makes sure you don’t get dizzy and bang your noggin.
Two weeks ago, you were waltzing around feeling young and attractive, and now you are the object of Get Well cards and recipient of bouquets of carnations. Rich or poor, young or old, we all face the injustice of life — it ends too soon, and statistical probability is no comfort.
We are all in the same boat, you and me and ex-Governor Palin and Congressman Joe Wilson, and wealth and social status do not prevail against disease and injury. And now we must reform our health insurance system so that it reflects our common humanity. It is not decent that people avoid seeking help for want of insurance. It is not decent that people go broke trying to get well. You know it and I know it. Time to fix it.
Garrison Keillor is the author of “77 Love Sonnets,” published by Common Good Books.
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Comments
Posted by MITCHRAPPGUY (anonymous) on September 20, 2009 at 11:17 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Would he have had the choice of going to the Mayo/St Mary's system on the proposed Health Plan? Would others? Seriously, I don't know.
Posted by Minne2 (anonymous) on September 20, 2009 at 2:05 p.m. (Suggest removal)
United Hospital in St Paul is an excellent hospital with many state of the art services including electronic medical records. Maybe, for some us, going to Mayo isn't always the answer to great medical care. United is on the list of preferred providers for my health insurance.
Posted by Minne2 (anonymous) on September 21, 2009 at 2:29 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Mitch, Garrison Keillor probably isn't a good example to use here. With his millons of dollars and name recognition, he could easily afford the out of pocket expenses for his medical bills and would get excellent care no matter he goes simply due to name recognition. Anyone, including his auto mechanic and hairdresser, would treat him like royalty for fear of being blasted in the media.
Since he is employed and is eligible for Medicare, that would be the primary payer on any medical claim. The Medicare supplements would pay the rest of the bill and he would pay the outstanding amounts.
For the rest of us Jane's & Joe's out there, it might be similar to what I have. My employer has contracted with the Allina system to be our network health care provider. If we chose to to go any other hospital, MD, etc; us, the employees, would pay additional expenses out of our pockets since we are "out of network."
Having grown up in Mayo's backyard, I haven't had any illnesses that are beyond the range of Allina's range of care. Also, I have no relatives in Rochester so there wouldn't be any easily available housing or drivers. With a world class medical center as the closest major (tertiary) care center, it's a different grasp when you think of folks in St Cloud and Duluth who have very good medical care in their own communities and would rather be treated in their hometowns.
Posted by MITCHRAPPGUY (anonymous) on September 23, 2009 at 9:47 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Minne, been away for a few days. I appreciate your well thought out explanation and theory. All good in the effort learn more. Thank you.
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