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The First Harvest

By: Sara Ellis, RN

Article Word Count: 1168 words  [Comments (0)]
Total Views: 4 Views














First responders arrived at the home initially, followed soon



thereafter by paramedics. We picked up the dispatch over the



radio scanner and prepared our minds and equipment in trauma



room one. This one was a long time coming which surprised us all



since the scene was within five minutes of the ER by car. 45



minutes passed before the call came telling us they were



inbound.









The ambulance pulled up to the doors and he was brought in on a



stretcher. He was SOA- smurfed on arrival, or perhaps I should



say cyanotic for the sake of the purists, which really means



that his skin was a most unappealing shade of blue. No IV line



had been started, and the rescue team were bagging as they



hurried him into the ER. 45 minutes on scene, four paramedics



accompanying him - the focus of the time on scene had been



concentrated on CPR alternating with unsuccessful attempts to



intubate.









My heart leapt into my throat as the stretcher was rolled into



place beside where I stood waiting, under the saucer shaped



overhead exam light, with IV catheter in hand & fluid hung ready



to get a line started. With his face partially obscured by



venti-mask this bare-chested man lying on the stretcher was the



spitting image of a man I deeply cared for- was it... ? No time



to pause to know that instant- other things took priority and



the IV was started, the ER doc tried to intubate, the parameds



kept up CPR and the theater became a whirlwind of fast working



professionals, some drawing blood for lab, taking x-rays,



connecting the lines for cardiac monitoring etc...









Very quickly I became busy pushing medicines through the IV



line, atropine, bicarb, epi, we drained the crash cart in short



order and had the house supervisor dashing for more. As I paused



between each administration I was able to see the man more



distinctly and know he was not the person I thought him to be at



first glance, although he could surely have been the man's



brother.









All efforts to intubate were unsuccessful as were the medicines



we were giving and the jolts from the defibrillator The



patient's wife had arrived and we learned that he was on the



waiting list for a new heart. With sadness, and after an hour of



all out effort in the ER we knew his name would be off that list



this night.









The doctor called the code. The patient was pronounced. We



removed the signs of our interventions and made him presentable.



His wife grieved. The ER physician returned to his call room and



the nursing staff began the mountain of tasks and paperwork that



follow an unsuccessful code.









My partner had recently been certified for organ harvest and she



noted on his driver's license that he had agreed to be a donor



and so after providing his wife a bit of time to cry, we had the



task of approaching this subject with her. I remember how his



wife handled it- she was a hero that night. We watched the time



and let her know when we would have to begin at the latest. A



wonderful trooper, she departed leaving her husband in our care.



It would be the last time she would look upon his features as he



was to be cremated.









"K" and I studied the manual closely, assembled all the



necessary items and got started. We worked together and by



carefully retracting, snipping and cutting delicately, removing



first one eye, and then the other, being sure to get as much



optic nerve as possible, pin it, cage the specimens and pack



them properly. It's a highly emotional feeling, the first time



you actually perform a harvest, and as nurses a scientifically



interesting change of routine as well. "K" and I remained high



on our experience the remainder of our tour of duty.









That was the first time I participated in a harvest. There have



been others since that night, but no matter how many chance and



circumstances will bring me to participate in or perform over



the course of my nursing career I will never forget Mr. "S" or



his brave wife. I am left filled with awe every time I think



about the contribution Mr. "S" made.









If I were to write a blockbuster movie or a best-selling novel I



would never come close to leaving a more meaningful contribution



than that of Mr. "S" and all those who like him donate their



organs. My mother had cataracts from an early age and her



quality of life was greatly improved by being able to have lens



implants. My father, still flying his private plane at age 82,



recently had a lens implant done and passed his FAA flight



physical. I hope it comforts Mrs. "S", as it should, to know



that her husband gave of himself so that others would be enabled



to lead better lives. What finer contribution can any of us hope



to make? I remember Mr. "S" with great respect and reverence and



every once in a while speak quietly and smile while telling him



... Mr. "S", you're a hell of a man. Somehow I think he looks



down and smiles back...









I hope that the next time you renew your driver's license, or



otherwise come across the question of whether or not you would



like to become a designated organ donor you will remember Mr.



"S" too and all of the fine people like him and consider



checking the box that says yes.









Written as I smile, remembering Mr. "S"





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