The silent vibration against my thigh was an unfamiliar
sensation over the past few days. I have
been without 4G, 3G, 1G and wireless since I arrived in Haiti. So even while the mindless banter in my group
texts is likely ongoing, I have been completely removed from it. Leaving my phone truly silent. So naturally, I checked to see what may have
gotten through. The message was simple,
but the timing could not have been worse.
“Bedica’s Birthday is in 2 days”.
Honestly, the date hadn’t crossed my mind when I was booking
my travel dates. But at this moment I
couldn’t even take any time to grieve or contemplate the message I had just
read. I was in the middle or trying to
navigate a resuscitation effort on a newborn girl.
The delivery came in the middle of the night prior. During clinic we probably see ten to twenty
obstetric patients per day which means the hospital delivers upwards of fifty
babies a month. This patient had seemed
innocuous enough. She was considered
term as our dates had her at >39 weeks gestation. Common practice is to induce in the office to
ensure that they deliver at the hospital and not at home, miles away. So I placed cytotec intravaginally and told
her to marché. Her labor curve went into
the evening. She ruptured approximately
6pm, but didn’t make much progress initially.
We opted to go to bed and I set my alarm so I could check on her every
hour. About midnight I went and found
her complete and ready to push.
It didn’t take long and we had a baby girl. There was no delivery team, so I scrounged
for the clamps and scissors. I have been
advocating for the nurses here to do “skin to skin” but it hasn’t caught on
yet. But, I’m by myself so baby goes
immediately to momma’s chest. Towel dry
for stimulation. She isn’t crying.
I’ve been through this before. In fact, this happened last time I was
here. I grab the baby and carry her over
to the resuscitation table. This time I
find an infant bag-mask and begin some positive airway pressure. It takes some time, but eventually she starts
coughing and crying. Whew. Happy sounds.
She’s still working a little harder to breathe than I would like, but
sometimes you just have to take what you can get. I replace her on mom’s chest and try in my
best broken Creole to tell her that “the baby isn’t breathing great, so we need
to keep watching”. And with that I head
to bed.
My alarm goes off in my ears an hour later and I walk down
to the post-partum “suite” to find the nurse getting the mom situated in a bed
and the baby with supplemental oxygen flowing by nasal cannula. She looks more comfortable wrapped snuggly in
her blanket and wearing her pink toboggan.
Her breathing still looks a little labored, but improved since a couple
hours earlier.
I check in on her throughout the next day. They turned off her oxygen around lunch time
and mama was happy to report to me that she was breastfeeding well for
her. I sneak a peek under the swaddled
mess of blankets and see her resting comfortably enough. “Thank goodness” I think to myself.
It was shortly after dinner that the Haitian resident
flagged John, my interpreter, to grab me.
There was a patient he wanted me to see.
I thought maybe another mom was about to deliver and he wanted to let me
know, but we bypass the delivery suite to the recovery beds. He points to the far bed and I know
immediately. I go check on her. She’s limp.
She’s tachypneic. She’s turning
blue. I grab her and bring her to the
delivery room where the neonatal resuscitation table is. Thankfully, the bag mask is still out from
when I used it to deliver her approximately 18 hours prior to now. I try my hardest to pace my breaths, but they
say in times of distress we often tend to over-ventilate. We pump too hard too quickly. Go big or go home, right? #NotAGreatStrategyInThisSituation
The nurse lugs in the suitcase sized oxygen machine from the
inpatient rooms. I ask if there is a way
to hook up the oxygen flow directly to the bag mask. Nope.
Alright, we place the three-size-too-big nasal cannula into her nares
and I try to continue to provide any sort of positive airway pressure that I
can. She’s dry. It doesn’t take a chemistry panel or even an
advanced degree to recognize that. The
Haitian resident calls for Dr. Leo and Dr. Ulysse to come examine the
baby. Dr. Ulysse quickly is able to
secure an IV in the baby’s right hand #MadSkills #CubanTraining. The nurse brings a bag of IV fluid. I’ll take anything at this point. “How much does she weight?” “2.3 kilograms.” That’s 2300 grams for those of you playing at
home. And that’s her birthweight. Something is amiss.
I pass off the bag mask to John and he’s doing a wonderful
job. For the next twenty minutes I’m on
my phone, with no internet access mind you, punching away on the calculator
function to figure out how much fluid to give and how fast to give it. Maintenance is 8 mL/hr. Dang.
That’s not even a mouthful of spit.
Okay, we need to “bolus” her like 20 mL twice. I grab the IV tubing wheel and roll it until
I count one drop every 3 seconds #OldSchool.
Now. Antibiotics.
Neonatal sepsis is treated by “Zosyn” in our hospital now - because we can. If you’re taking a
board exam the answer for treatment of neonatal sepsis is ampicillin and
gentamycin. I’m gonna go out on a limb
and assume we do not have Zosyn here. I
ask the nurse for ampicillin and gentamycin for IV use. No ampicillin. Penicillin it is. #AlwaysSettle
I didn’t realize how difficult it can be to be a pharmacist
until this very moment. I mean, I always
find it super annoying to have to figure out how much of an oral suspension for
a kiddo to take to get the appropriate dose of medication. Now I’m reconstituting penicillin, figuring
out how many thousands of units this baby needs to receive every six hours, and
how many mL that would be
#MathIsHard The answers for those
of you playing at home are 115,000 units which equates to about 0.14 mL of the
reconstituted penicillin. Now I have to
do the same to figure out how much of the gentamycin to give her. #FML In
order to keep things simple I took a piece of tape and wrote the drug and dose
on it and put it on the syringe I used.
Unfortunately the IV tubing we were using didn’t have a port for me to
administer additional medication. Screw
it, I.M. it is.
I resume my position manning the bag mask. Minutes feel like hours. Her little lungs fill with each pump of the
bag. Suddenly the nurse points to the IV
fluid chamber. It stopped flowing. Her little R hand was swollen up to twice its
normal size. Our IV had
infiltrated. A wise man once told me
that subq fluid still got fluid into the system, and in this situation I was
going to take what I could get. But the
nurse pulled the IV catheter before I could say anything. Dr. Ulysse was able to come down and place
one in the other hand in short order #LikeABoss
We continued our resuscitative efforts.
This time I paced out the fluids to one drop every 8 seconds.
Needless to say, pumping away on an ambu bag for a long
period of time can get monotonous. Even
with trying to count in my head and stay gentle with the amount of pressure I
create, it’s easy to for me to get distracted.
Time is crawling and there is no end in sight.
The Haitian resident places his hands on her chest and
comments, “Li fret”, indicating that he thinks she’s cold. I look down, feel her chest, and immediately
grab my stethoscope. There’s good reason
for her to be cold; her pulse was at best 20 bpm. Her hands were already blue.
90.5 is what her axillary temperature measured. Before the thermometer even alarmed I had
started CPR with rescue breathing and chest compressions. I cycle as fast as I can. Occasionally she opens her eyes and a spastic
movement squeezes enough air out of her chest to make a squeal. Cycle after cycle and I feel like I’m getting
nowhere. I check for cardiac activity
and can’t detect anything that seems like it would offer perfusion. And so I continue. I spin her around because up to this point I
was operating with her head towards me and feet away from me. With her feet towards me I can wrap my hands
around her torso and use my thumbs to compress her chest. I can also visualize chest wall expansion
with each breath. Bruises are already
setting in from my trauma. And we just
lost our other IV.
The Haitian resident, recognizing my fatigue and dwindling
faith, points to the wall and offers simply, “Nou gen epinephrine?” I’m not even sure what I would be giving it
for. We have been resuscitating this
girl for an hour now, what good could it possibly do?
The patient’s father and grandmother walk into the room to
me doing compressions and rescue breathing.
I’m not sure if it was the look on my face or if they caught a glimpse
of their little girl on the table, but you could see the despair in their
eyes. Why not? “Please give me the epinephrine.”
Hmmm, I have a 3 mL syringe with 0.5 mL of solution in
it. There is a piece of tape with
“Epinephrine” written on it. No
dose. No concentration. Nothing.
And nobody knows. Well, I don’t
have an IV or an endotracheal tube, so at least the route of administration
isn’t in question. I grab her thigh and
plunge the 18 gauge needle into the muscle.
I push the plunger. No carefully
planned amount. Just push the plunger. And then resume compressions.
Minutes pass by. Why
not? I grab the other thigh and empty
the rest of the syringe. Tick tock. Tick tock.
I listen with my stethoscope.
Wait a minute, that heart rate is improving. I stop with compressions and resume rescue
breathing with the ambu bag. I see some
more purposeful movements in her arms and legs.
She’s even offering some of her own breaths.
I continue supporting while the Haitian resident continues
to stimulate in the hopes of producing a cry.
I take another listen. 108
bpm. Dr. Leo swings back by to check on
the baby. We tell him we lost our IV
again. He turns to the family and tells
them that the baby may not make it through the night. And with that he is off. We’re gonna do what we can without an
IV. I stop with the rescue breathing and
see how she does on her own. All things
considered it isn’t awful. She has a
little accessory muscle use, but her rate is hovering around 70. I set the bag down. We replace the nasal cannula as I had removed
it when I started with compressions. And
I stepped away.
Her next doses of antibiotics were due at 1255 and 0255 a.m.
My phone was set. She needed some sort
of volume, so we attempted to have her breastfeed. It went okay for a few minutes. She didn’t really latch, but her mother was
able to express some milk manually. 8 mL
an hour is her maintenance, so if we can do that intermittently I would call
that a win. Still, she quickly tired
without the supplemental oxygen, so I placed her back on the resuscitation
table. That’s the only place in the
hospital with a radiant warmer, and her temp was still low 90s. She still has the bag of IV fluid hanging on
the pole beside her. Why not? I open the tubing and let a little trickle
into her mouth. She immediately does her
best to latch onto the end of the tubing and begins suckling at it. #FluidIsFluid at this stage of the game. She gets about ten drops before she starts
coughing. I’ll take that all day, every
day, and twice on Sunday.
New resolution, wake up every hour, see if she can take some
expressed breast milk and then supplement with the IV now PO fluid. This is going to be a long night.
I head upstairs.
There are still several people in that room, and for most of the
resuscitation there was a mom of a different baby still being cleaned up from
her delivery. Right now our little girl
is holding her own. Her heart rate is
stable. With the 4LNC in she’s breathing
much more comfortably. She has some
purposeful movements in her arms and legs.
Not much more you can ask for given our situation. I don’t have telemetry to give me a constant
update on her heart rate. I don’t have a
pulse oximeter to assess her oxygenation.
I don’t even have an IV to give her the parenteral nutrition and fluid
she so desperately needs. She was only
2.3 kilograms, meaning that even if she were a 37 week baby she would be close to SGA. How certain can we be of our
dates in Haiti? Did we induce a
premature baby? Questions that will
never be answered. Problems that won’t
be resolved. We have a second year
family medicine resident trying to care for an NICU baby.
I grabbed a sheet and several blankets – it gets cold in the
mountains at night – and head back to the delivery suite. We don’t have any women in active labor, so
I’m calling dibs on the bed. Yes, the
same beds that have been covered by more blood, poop, and amniotic fluid than
I’d care to count. I plan on posting up
there for the night. My syringes are
ready to go. I plug my phone into the
socket; alarms are ready to go. Let’s do
this.
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