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well, at least it happened towards the end of summer...
Friday I was finally getting some writing done at work, and had just walked back into my office with lunch in hand. My cell phone rings and the ex says, "camp just called and Calvin broke his arm." My office is on the 6th floor facing west in Marina del Rey, and his camp for the week is at the UCLA Marine Aquatic Center, which happens to be due west of me, about a half mile away. While I'm on the phone with her, right on cue, I see a fire truck with lights on making the turn off Lincoln (the main street) onto Fiji towards the MAC. I drop lunch, head down the elevator and quickly drive the half mile to the MAC.
I pull up and sure enough there is the fire truck along with paramedic unit. Sitting on the bench is the boy getting an orange vacuum splint applied to his right arm. He's pretty freaked out, but dad's here so everything will be marginally OK. I hop in the back of the ambulance with him strapped to the gurney and we ride to UCLA Westwood hospital. They wheel us into triage and I'm taken aback a bit by the traffic - people on gurneys parked everywhere. After about 20 minutes the triage nurse checks him out and we get dropped into an exam room. Very nice nurses and docs coming through to get him checked out, then x-rayed, then back to the room. He fell while running playing capture the flag (putting his hand down to break his fall - classic injury) and I though it was his wrist but once they took the splint off I saw the somewhat boomerang shape of his lower arm and figured it was a double break of radius and ulna. They developed the films and I asked to see them - sure enough, both cracked and one bent back. His mom showed up at the ER and we all hung out. She doesn't like docs or hospitals and gets squeamish but luckily I don't mind and am pretty curious about everything, knowing just enough premed topics to be dangerous. We soon get moved from the exam room to another hallway and that's where we spend the next 6 hours - in the hallway. Next to us is a young kid with a urinary tract infections (gave him a script for Keflex and sent him home) and a guy in his 80's with Parkinson's, cancer, and in for bad bed sores along with his wife (not very patient) and his daughter (very nice). Amazing the stories and lives you see hanging out in the hallway of an ER. Like the woman who got wheeled into one of the trauma rooms to be seen by the residents. The attending doc had seen her multiple times over the past few years, removing various pens, paper clips and other sharp objects she had jabbed into her abdomen. Then there was the guy who had a neurological exam, got tired of waiting on the gurney in the hallway (despite him being brought lunch) and finally removed his IV himself and walked out following a heated phone conversation with someone (friend? family?) who didn't want to come pick him up from the hospital. Anyway, back to Calvin. They determined that they needed to reduce the fracture, and the boy is a wimp when it comes to pain (more mom genes). By contrast, I broke my wrist in a floor hockey game in college early in the first half. I finished playing the game and then when to the ER to get xrays. There was no way they were going to be able to do it with him conscious, and he asked to be knocked out. They gave him ketamine, which is a freaky drug - eyes are open and they are "awake" but their conscious mind is disconnected from the body. They put him "under", manipulated the arm and put the splint on. Checked with xrays afterwards and looks like they got it right. He has to go to ortho next week for them to check the early healing and then get the "real "cast. I have to commend the staff - they were all great. It was a long 8 hours of mostly standing in the hallway trying to keep son and mom from freaking out. The hospital is excellent but is too small, and evidently they built it that way. There are no beds, and for people admitted there currently is a 1-2 day wait for a room. Crazy. At least the Santa Monica hospital (run by UCLA) actually has beds (learned this listening to the doc talk to the patient next to us in the hall). Stuff happens. Hug your kids, and be happy that things aren't worse (please no parf-ish healthcare rants). ![]() ![]() |
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: South of Heaven
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Glad the boy is ok.
With all that apparatus it looks like he's about to get a heart transplant! |
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Quote:
Hospital ERs are interesting places... |
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a grand adventure stashed away for a future memory...
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"Now, to put a water-cooled engine in the rear and to have a radiator in the front, that's not very intelligent." -Ferry Porsche (PANO, Oct. '73) (I, Paul D. have loved this quote since 1973. It will remain as long as I post here.) |
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do i have to break something to get some ketamine? that second shot you post, i need some of that....
tell lil static to heal up quick. is he a south paw or will writing at school be an issue? t
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78SC PRC Spec911 (sold 12/15) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7I6HCCKrVQ Now gone: 03 996TT/75 slicklid 3.oL carb'd hotrod 15 Rubicon JK/07.5 LMM Duramax 4x/86 Ski Nautique Correct Craft |
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Join Date: May 2000
Location: Phoenix
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That IS a lot of stuff. I think I recognize the machine that goes "BING!"
As a parent I can't imagine what that's like. It breaks my heart if my daughter skins her knee... that's got to be really tough.
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Lee |
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Family Values
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 4,075
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Why'd they haul you all the way back to Westwood? Isn't there a hospital in MDR?
Glad he's on the mend.
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- Joe Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves. - William Pitt |
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wow. he just got out of helping you pack up and move!
he will heal so fast at that age. our age?, not so much.
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poof! gone |
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: San Jose
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Thanks for sharing a good story. Glad he will be okay. We have been lucky with our kid so far. (knock on wood)
I spent Thursday in the ER myself. Maybe I'll post that in another thread.
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OUCH!
Glad that all it was was an arm! Hope that it's not too traumatic for him!
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" Formerly we suffered from crime. Today we suffer from laws" (55-120) Tacitus |
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Get off my lawn!
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Wow a full out ER visit with knock out drugs. As a kid that grew up in the "olden" days of the 50s & 60s I only broke one arm, a collar bone and my big toe in six places. My brother fell out of a tree and broke both arms at the same time. He used to beat the he*l out of me with those arm cast. We never had full anesthesia for any broken bones.
I remember when I broke my big toe in six places I knew I something painful was going to happen when six big orderlies walked into the treatment room. The Dr. followed carrying a wooden dowel for me to bite on. The six guys held me down as I bit down on the stick. The Dr. grabbed my toe and did the "Tennessee toe torture" right from an episode of the Beverley Hillbillies. He re-set my toe and then he burned a hole in my toenail with a hot needle. I had a cast up to my knee for six weeks. I managed to smash my toe with a man-hole cover. That is long story for another time. Nostatic, I am glad your son is OK. Modern medicine is a wonderful thing. If that had happened just 100 years ago he could well have died if not crippled for life.
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Glen 49 Year member of the Porsche Club of America 1985 911 Carrera; 2017 Macan 1986 El Camino with Fuel Injected 350 Crate Engine My Motto: I will never be too old to have a happy childhood! |
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Glad he's OK. While they are the most pain most of us will ever feel, going through childhood without breaking a bone would be missing the whole kid experience
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Of course I was wearing one of my work polo shirts with USC logo on it. I caught a little verbal abuse for that... |
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Hamburg & Vancouver
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Without getting political...and just for comparative purposes...I would be very interested to hear what this episode will cost you, and who will pay for it.
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Todd,
Glad he's doing well. Maybe Brotman has changed. It wouldn't have been my first choice back in the day.
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Peter '79 930, Odyssey kid carrier, Prius sacrificial lamb Missing ![]() nil carborundum illegitimi |
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You do not have permissi
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: midwest
Posts: 39,824
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The medical treatment of the middle ages were a little worse.
Glad to hear it turned out ok. The emotional support is what will be most important in the coming weeks, the body is it's best long-term doctor . Important: check on irritation/reddness problems around I.V. penetrations, and make sure blood thinners are properly applied and monitored! No mersa or strokes allowed. |
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Quote:
I'm figuring it probably is a $5K visit. |
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Glad your boys gonna be ok.
Funny I worked in MDR for 5 years. Worked in the last building at the end of Fiji way ![]()
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Michael |
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hoping he heals quickly!
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Glad things turned out OK. You were both lucky you could get there to be with him in such a short time. I bet it helped the situation out a lot as far as he was concerned. Good luck to him in his recovery.
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