Wednesday, March 29, 2017

I don't think so

I have a 15 year old female patient who claims she can't see after getting hit in the face with a cell phone.  She obviously has a swollen black eye to one side but no trauma to the other side.  She refuses to even try to open her eye (unless she thinks you're not looking where she'll not only open both eyes but she is able to text from her phone without any problem until you walk in the room where she'll then pretend she can't read/write anymore on her phone).

At one point she needed to walk to the bathroom, once again "walking blindly" with her younger sister helping her out.  She calls my name and grabs my elbow (how could she see where that was?) so I can help "guide" her to the bathroom (where she then proceeds to take care of everything herself, presumably, because no way in hell I'm hanging out in there).

By the end of the night it's time to determine whether or not her eye will need stitches.  Because of all the dried blood near the site of injury (because when you're bleeding you just let it run down your face, no need to try and control it) we have to soak (damp cloth) and scrub (gauze and elbow grease). Because of the pain she is in (honestly I believe she hurt, just milked it for everything) she said she needed to hold my hand.  At this point she reaches out and grabs my hand (miraculously able to see exactly where my hand was even though her eyes were still "swollen shut").  Keep in mind her girlfriend (whose perfume smelled a lot like wacky tobacky), mother and sister are in the room with her cousin cleaning the room next door (who also couldn't figure out how to unlock a push lock door, that's something special).

Seriously, she just needed to push the handle down to unlock it and she couldn't figure it out.  Please don't breed...
I don't think so.  I literally pulled my hand away from her and pointed out her family and friends who could hold her hand during this "traumatizing moment" (ok, I didn't actually say traumatizing moment, just told her about her family in the room who could hold her hand).

Several co-workers said I should have just let her hold my hand so she could get a contact buzz from the situation (I think there was enough buzz in that room just going second hand. Here's hoping I don't get drug tested any time soon).

So, what would you do in this scenario?

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