Nellie heads back to the nursing station, checking on 199 on the way, and refreshes her memory on the assignment board and monitor display.
202: Hers. Hypothermia wizard guy, enough said.
201: Chantal's. Boring-as-fuck old lady with pneumonia, tubed but stable, feeds and turns and insulin injections. Not a bad charge assignment.
200: Mayumi's. 61-year-old woman having a very rough post-op course after repair of a bleeding ulcer. Mostly rough because, at 5'2", she weighs an impressive 300+ pounds, and she probably had some sort of undiagnosed lung problem. She can't tolerate lying flat or being awake at all.
199: Hers. 72-year-old man with all the usual acronyms after his name, COPD, CHF, etc. He's a frequent flyer, here for his regular quarterly respiratory crisis that happens every time he gets a cold. He's on the usual list of pills, to be crushed up one by one and splooged down his NG tube, and Q6H Lasix injections convincing his kidneys to piss out all the water currently hanging out in his ballooned-up legs and trying to back up into his lungs. Nothing especially novel or confusing, but she'll have to keep an eye on him. At least he's somehow managed to avoid being diabetic.
198: Mayumi's. 19-year-old girl with severe lifelong asthma, had a bad attack a couple days ago, coded in the ER, currently chemically paralyzed while they throw steroids and brochodilators and everything they can think of at her. Poor thing. This isn't her first time here either.
197: Isobel's. 52-year-old executive who came down with the flu, tried to work through it, collapsed in his office, and was brought in by his secretary the next morning - dehydrated to the point of acute kidney failure, with some bonus rhabdomyolysis from a night sprawled immobile on his carpet, and satting at 58% on room air. His lungs are starting to recover a little, he's off paralytics and they're lightening his sedation a little on day shift, but he's still on CRRT - continuous slow dialysis at the bedside. If he stabilizes enough to tolerate regular Mon-Wed-Fri hemodialysis before his kidneys recover, they'll have to transfer him, this hospital doesn't have a dialysis centre. He's peeing a little, though, so looking up. The fact that Isobel isn't 1:1 with him is honestly horrifying to Nellie.
196: Kaysi's. Screaming harpy - at night, anyway, apparently she's lovely when the sun's up. Waiting for a pacemaker. Last night she did a 15-second pause on the ECG and didn't even stop shrieking the entire time. She's otherwise stable, though, no drips and her IV is very thoroughly wrapped so she can't find it.
195: Isobel's second patient. 42-year-old man with severe Down's syndrome, comes in about once a year for pneumonia and needs 2-4 days on a vent while the antibiotics kick in. He's very sweet and polite and he's so used to the routine he barely needs sedation; he tolerates his hands being loosely restrained just in case, as long as he can reach his TV remote and watch his soap operas.
194: Pascal's. Beanpole old man who looks a bit like Patrick Stewart, 82 and previously healthy except for well-controlled high blood pressure, but he had a STEMI and then a complete heart block - his heart's electrical signals aren't making it through, disrupted by damaged tissues. He's got a transvenous pacemaker shoved in through his jugular while they try to stabilize him with meds; if that doesn't work he'll eventually get an internal pacemaker just like 196. Fortunately he's been stable, because:
192: Sick-as-fuck transfer from some shitty outlying community hospital, and also Pascal's. Poor guy, he's scarcely out of nursing school. Nellie can't really fault Amélie's assignment choices; 190 is also complicated and Kaysi knows her, and Nellie wouldn't have been comfortable taking on a sick admit plus wizard guy. The patient, however, is a dumpster fire. She'll see what she can do to help Pascal out overnight.
190: Kaysi's. 39-year-old mother of four with a long history of Crohn's disease and two previous abdominal surgeries, though until this year she'd managed to stay healthy enough to go to the gym and even work part-time. Three weeks ago, though, she came in with a severe bowel obstruction, refused an NG tube, and ended up aspirating her vomit when they induced anesthesia for her operation. Her vomit...turned out to be poop. Which does not belong in lungs. And she's immunosuppressed, thanks to her Crohn's medications. She's had a HELL of a ride for the last three weeks. She's finally starting to recover from the sepsis, but being on heroic doses of pressors and corticosteroids didn't do her healing wound any favours, and she has a very complicated dressing and wound packing that needs redoing daily. Kaysi's been doing it on nights, since day shift tends to be busier, but Nellie has a feeling tonight is not going to be much better.
188: Unfortunately, also Chantal's. Tiny Asian man who had a hemorrhagic stroke. They're seeing tiny improvements, with him off sedation - he tracks people with his eyes and occasionally moves his non-paralyzed side - but he's lost a lot of function. He's waiting for a trach and PEG tube, and will probably end up transferring out to rehab. His even tinier Asian wife sleeps in the room with him every night and is eagerly learning how to care for him; she's a sharp woman, a retired professional pianist music professor at U of O (her husband taught literature). She wants to care for him at home, eventually. They're both in their 70s but, for once, Nellie is hopeful that she'll pull it off, and that she and her husband could have another few years together. He's not a bad charge assignment either, since his wife is on the ball, but having both means Chantal won't have nearly as much time to spare for managing the unit overall.
Not to mention they're full up.
Nellie might be new here, but she used to pull shifts as charge nurse back in Austin. She's used to the drill, and to tracking in the back of her mind who could be rush-transferred out if a sick patient showed up in the ER.
There are really only two options. Screaming harpy in 196; she is, in theory, medically stable enough to be a telemetry patient, she would just ruin some poor nurse's night.
And Ma'ar.
She does NOT want to transfer Ma'ar out. His blood sugars are labile and his sodium is still low and he hasn't even been off the vent for eight hours. But she can't deny that he's hemodynamically stable and has minimal oxygen needs. The bigger problem is that he's a TELEPATHIC WIZARD and Nellie feels like the telemetry nurses are even less prepared for that than a delirious old bat, which they've seen plenty of. Also he's traumatized.
...Nope, if someone tries to transfer him out, she's going to fight it tooth and nail. If they have to kick a sick patient in the ER over to the Civic or Ottawa General because they're full, so be it. Ma'ar isn't going anywhere tonight.