When you want to cry, but can’t

April 15, 2008

Anna Reisman: “I suddenly realized how quiet it was. Her shoulders and chest were heaving, but she wasn’t breathing. She was trembling, the tears streaming down her cheeks, and she couldn’t take a breath to use the inhaler. I sat still, trying to look calm, my mind racing. Should I thump her back? Call for help? Start CPR? After an interminable moment she sucked in a couple of wheezy puffs . . .

. . . Then it struck me. Regular breathing was hard enough with her emphysema; crying “” with its deep irregular inhalations “” crippled her ability to draw in air.”



Related posts:

  1. Crying in palliative care
  2. Intubating
  3. Your patient is crying, what to do?
  4. Thunderstorms and your iPod
  5. More on the patient-hitting cardiologist
  6. Prostate cancer screening in blacks, and the lack of balanced information
  7. Cardiologists deliver a baby on flight


KevinMD.com on Facebook


  Follow on Twitter   Subscribe



Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post: Closing a VA psychiatry ward

Next post: Did political connections get this medical student admitted?

Site Meter