Marian sends off the tubes for all the random-nutrient-deficiency tests plus the blood sugar. And then checks on the glucometer as well, with the last driblet of the blood she pulled from his arterial line. It's at 92. Seems fine. She'll check again at...noon. It seems like she doesn't have anything else to do before then, except creeping down on the norepi drip whenever she can. Down to 8ml/h now. Way better than before.
The current bag of potassium is just about empty, and in a moment of brilliance and time management, she thinks to pause and silence the pump and swap to the next bag now, so the alarm won't disturb him and she won't have to come back in here again.
She goes to collect the new tube-feeds formula for next door, and pulls a dose of Imodium, and then is entirely unsurprised to find more diarrhea, though at least there's less of it? By the time that's dealt with, it's still really early for her noon assessment, but she does it anyway, including the blood sugar check, because then she can arguably get away with not coming back in here until 1:30 pm. Nothing's really changed. She's not surprised.
At 11:30 she parks her butt in her chair, where she has a good angle to see both of her sleeping, sedated patients, and she CHARTS. It's the first time she's had a chance to really thoroughly go down all the flowsheets for various assessments and there are an awful lot of gaps. She catches herself doing some guesswork and extrapolation. Whatever, it's fine.
Even with the huge backlog, by 11:50 she's done and at a loss. The steady lunchtime bustle in the more central part of the unit is a long way off. Probably people need help, but she could just...sit here...for five minutes.
She sneaks out her phone and looks up meditation instructions and tries to sit with good posture and focus on the breath in her nostrils for the next ten minutes.