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What chilling things happened in the hospital intensive care unit (ICU)?

There are too many moments in the ICU. I remember that just after the opening of the department, I met a particularly difficult patient. A 5-year-old boy fell from the fifth floor with multiple injuries and hemorrhagic shock. Immediately after being sent to the ICU of the hospital, a rescue team was set up. The medical department took the lead in multidisciplinary participation, but the doctors involved in the rescue knew in their hearts that no one was sure whether the child could be rescued. At that time, I was in a meeting room. When my colleague called me, I rushed back to the department. I saw such a skinny child, who looked like a 3-year-old. I couldn't bear to cooperate with the doctor to intubate, open the airway and suck sputum. The bloody sputum in my mouth was a bit doubtful. All kinds of rescue measures lasted for six hours, and the child's condition gradually developed in a good direction. At that time, I asked the director if the child had any hope, but the director was not sure, but no one gave up. The family members were crying outside the door, looking at the child lying in the hospital bed and thinking about the parents outside the intensive care unit. How could they not work hard? After four days of all-out treatment, the child turned to safety and was transferred to a specialized ward for elective surgery. Today, the child is recovering well. This job is really tiring, but some sense of accomplishment can only be found in the place closest to death.

There is another patient in ICU, which is the embodiment of ICU syndrome. In this totally enclosed environment, people are exposed to all kinds of machine sounds and dazzling lights all day long, and they will see all kinds of thrilling rescue scenes. Fear and loneliness will make them have all kinds of mental disorders. The most serious thing is delirium. What is delirium? "Is the consciousness disorder, confusion, hallucinations, mostly visual hallucinations, but also auditory hallucinations, whether visual hallucinations or auditory hallucinations, the general content makes patients feel horrible. These patients are our biggest headache, crying and crying to be discharged from the hospital, and the tranquility at night is often broken by them. At this time, we need more patience to enlighten the patients. Because of the closure of the ICU and the "incisive" display of the childishness of the elderly, we can only sit by the bed and listen carefully, resulting in the work not being completed in time. You'll never imagine the strength of a patient who doesn't cooperate with the treatment. There was once a female patient in her thirties who was poisoned by pesticides. Just to give the patient an injection, the doctor and I didn't hold the patient down, scratching and kicking. Failure to cooperate with treatment often means spending more money and receiving longer treatment.

Looking back over the past two years, nearly ten children have fallen from a height, but all of them have turned to safety (parents are reminded to pay more attention to young children to avoid accidents), and there are countless cases of pesticide poisoning. Every time they meet such patients, they want to scold them. Others are ruined to live, but they regard their lives as dirt, but their careers are not allowed, so they can only try their best to treat them. I just hope that they can treat life as a treasure in the future, because there is no such thing. When I was still practicing before I entered the job, a patient took paraquat orally because of family conflicts, and only a sip took the life of an honest life. A family may be implicated behind a life. Paraquat gives you time to regret, but it doesn't give you a chance to live.