If you're wondering what Bethel, Alaska looks like without all that ice and snow, look no further: There is grass! Trees with green leaves! Daylight until 1 am! And lots & lots of rain which produces copious amounts of mud. I forgot my umbrella, but I did arrive equipped with an insanely cheery pair of child-size "fireman style" rubber boots:
I'm staying at one of the hospital-owned apartments next door to the jail (I will not lie--the barbed wire fence does give off penitentiary vibes). So far, the prisoners have been extremely quiet and neighborly. There is a super muddy trail leading from the apartments straight to the hospital that can be traversed in less than 5 minutes. It's hard to believe that I can squeeze through the narrow gap between two barbed wire fences--wearing all my waterproof gear and my internal frame pack--without setting off several alarms
and alerting the Alaska State Troopers.
Meanwhile, back on the inpatient wards, I feel like I'm swimming in jello, and everything I do is soooo slow and cumbersome. I have a large service of patients who have been here forever, many with tricky family dynamics that must be navigated carefully. The RMT calls are as crazy as I remembered, and today's top prize goes to a call about a 79-yr-old woman who had chest pain, then dramatically collapsed in the doorway of the village clinic, then went into bradycardia with a pulse of 40 followed by a seizure after receiving one dose of nitroglycerin. After being medevac'd to the ER, she was found to have a very low hemoglobin of 6! Oh Bethel, how I've missed you...
Yay! Love the shout out to correctional medicine! They had nearly the same sign in front of my prison. Can't wait to hear more Klondike adventures.
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