New admit is sick as hell! Marian finagles her way to attempting to draw blood while the paramedics give a verbal report. She may be meh at execution on IVs but, for whatever reason - probably patience, persistence, and the willingness to abuse instant heat packs and also draw from a crouching position on the floor so she can use gravity - she can almost always get blood.
He's a 45-year-old man, who looks at least 15 years older. History of type II diabetes diagnosed when he was twenty-nine, high blood pressure, atherosclerosis, early-stage kidney disease as a result of all three of those. Oh, and morbid obesity, though he's not actually nearly as fat as he looked at a glance. His hands and forearms only have a moderate layer of protective blubber hiding his veins. It's mostly belly, because he is ridiculously bloated.
He presented to the tiny community hospital in Almonte two days ago, with abdominal pain, constipation, nausea and vomiting. Acute bowel obstruction was ruled out, though an ileus - basically just decreased movement of the gut - is still suspected. Diagnosis is severe pancreatitis. It came out that he averages six to 10 drinks a day, which cannot possibly be good for ANY of his other health problems.
Yesterday he started requiring oxygen. Just a little bit at first, but by 7 am today he was at the max nasal cannula rate of 6 L/min, and by noon he was on 100%. For some inexplicable reason the floor nurse in Almonte...thought this was fine...even as he spiked a high fever and became increasingly anxious and restless, his heart rate and respiratory rate climbing. It wasn't until his blood pressure started tanking hard at 3 pm that the rapid response team was called, by which point he was lethargic, entirely disoriented, and running a fever of 40 C. They're assuming sepsis, his white blood cell count is through the roof. He got four litres of saline during the 45-min ambulance ride over, and even with that his blood pressure is lurking around 82/40, as though trying to hide under a table from someone who might shout at it.