I want to tell you what happens behind the scenes at an emergency department. I am currently working at a kids emergency department and in the last couple of weeks, we have been absolutely flooded with patients. People have been flocking to us in record numbers and as a consequence, our waiting room has been a symphony of wailing, crying, coughing, sneezing, vomiting and yelling. That’s a lot of cranky kids and their parents in one room, 24/7.
The key to all of this however, is that the people in the waiting room are merely the tip of the iceberg. For every patient in the waiting room, there is another two if not three that are brought straight into the department (usually brought by ambulance) because they are so unwell and will most likely need to be admitted to hospital. These are the kids that need oxygen, immediate antibiotics or fluids through a drip or who have broken their limbs so badly that they need intravenous morphine and are eventually taken to an operating theatre.
The call we all dread however is the call to attend a category one patient – patients whose lives are in immediate danger. These are the ‘lights and sirens’ patients that pass you on the freeway in an ambulance, the cases that require the attention of many doctors and nurses all at once, not just emergency doctors but surgeons, intensive care specialists and paediatricians. This happens in the resuscitation rooms, away from the eyes of the general public and without fanfare. You can imagine that if there are several of these resuscitation cases in a day, other patients may end up waiting a little longer to be seen.