Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 12 | Page 12

(continued from page 9) CHANGES WITH PARENTHOOD Brian Ferguson, DO A s health care providers, our job is taking care of other people’s hus- bands, wives, sons and daughters. Being married certainly can add perspective to this, and undoubtedly offers support during those rough nights, regrettable decisions and senseless losses we have all witnessed, in a city plagued by violence and prolific drug abuse. Likewise, being a parent offers insight into the feelings of family members, sitting patiently beside their sons and daughters in the ED: their frustrations, their griefs, their fears, their joys and their losses. To someone who has never raised an infant, it makes little logical sense why anyone would bring a stable RSV’er to the emergency room. However, to someone with a four-month-old, every congested breath and every wheeze is terrifying. I am the new father to a beautiful baby boy, and admittedly, after every ER shift, I strip, shower and hand sterilize with alcohol before I dare get near him; and may be a bit obsessed about others hand-washing around him. Fortunately for my little Connor, he had no fevers and therefore no LPs, no RSV and no Flu, no problems feeding and is gaining weight well. From the ER perspective, wit- nessing all the treacherous happenings to little ones as they grow, brings both an innate sense of gratitude and sometimes an even greater sense of fear with every sniffle and mishap that Connor offers me. This gratitude realized is tempered by the loss of other children in our ER who are loved equally as much, who are sick or victims of trauma and will never improve. I am thankful for the health and wellbeing of my own, but since becoming a father I feel a new sadness for those that aren’t. Now, when I do LPs, I cannot help but think about the fear of the mom, something I addressed 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE discussing the procedure in the past, but quickly disregarded after consent was signed. Leaving for work in the morning has changed too. When I drive in, I am thankful to be going to a job, a job that I know will be there the next morning. I feel a new strength for my son, that I need to do a good job, that I need to be a good doctor, as his name is my name and when able, I want him to feel pride in what his father does. When I see mothers at work, I cannot help but feel a deep-rooted respect for their sacrifice. Fathers help at home during those early months, but few would disagree that it is the mother running the ship. I cannot imagine how my colleagues are able to keep their resident schedules while breast-feeding and pumping. I find this sheerly amazing. It was hard to leave home before, and harder now, but it is even better to be home. Ironically, when I am home, I tend to dwell on work a bit more than before. Soon after Connor was born, I met a young mother of two small children who had overdosed on heroin. She was found down, in asystole, yet she was warm and was subse- quently resuscitated on scene by an emergency medicine attending and a current EM resident that happened to be there with EMS. She presented to Room 9 with compressions ongoing. We intermittently did compressions followed by intensive care with multiple pressor agents, and for two hours she would regain pulses and would inter- mittently lose them again. I would leave the trauma bay periodically to update family. Eventually, it became clear she was not going to maintain a pulse. I went back to the family room to update family, bringing their emotional rollercoaster to a heart-wrenching end. Telling them their beloved, previously healthy family member was not going to make it was hard—it always is. Her mother, father,