October 20, 2011

Why it’s dangerous for me to work in the health industry

Filed under: Miscellaneous — Shauna @ 10:57 am

When I was a kid, I stumbled across a medical encyclopedia on my parent’s bookshelf. It was full of possible medical symptoms and their respective causes and treatments. For me, it was a cornucopia of “Choose your own adventure” questionnaires illustrated with fantastic flowcharts, but unfortunately, no matter how I answered the questions, the dire call to action almost always resulted in: “GO TO THE EMERGENCY ROOM IMMEDIATELY. YOU MAY HAVE A BRAIN TUMOR.”

An Example of Said Flowchart, Based on my Impeccable Childhood Memory:

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I became obsessed with studying every last page of this book. Especially the “What to do in an emergency” section. If a poorly drawn sketch of a woman had decided to give birth in a hallway — just like in the book — I would’ve known exactly what to do. Unfortunately, I spent most of my time reading through those symptom flowcharts, where every random ache and pain aggressively morphed into some life-threatening disease and I became more and more convinced that I was going to die. (It was about this time that my mother suggested that I stop reading.)

Fast-forward 20 years.

A few weeks ago I was in the shower when I reached for a bottle of shampoo. My right arm gave a painful jolt that I took to mean: Yeah. Don’t do that. I figured my lifelong habit of sleeping with my arm folded under my pillow meant I had pinched a nerve. Or that my early-morning weightlifting had finally coaxed out the presence of an actual muscle.

An hour or so later at work, I made the stupid, silly, regrettable mistake of moving my arm slightly. The pain was unlike anything I had ever felt. It felt like a pinched nerve — if the nerve was stuck in a vise grip, twisted violently into a knot, and then sawed at with a dull knife that had recently come from a boiling vat of acid.

Holy CHRIST, I thought, instantly feeling nauseous. Breathing shallowly, I put my head down on my desk and thanked God for the mostly hidden location of my cubicle. I kept fidgeting and trying to rest my head without disturbing my arm again, but I just couldn’t get comfortable. I was hot and clammy and while the pain had mostly disappeared, the sensation that it could reappear was very strong.

I weakly used my left hand to tap a search into Google. Instead of typing my actual symptoms of “stabbing pain right bicep,” I unwisely let my mind go back to my childhood days of medical yore and searched for “symptoms of heart attack.” I had 2 out of the 3 symptoms listed for women. Oops. I frantically performed a search on pain in the bicep and discovered it was probably something harmless like tendinitis. (Let it be known that I will do ANYTHING to avoid going to the doctor. Completely unrelated, if you get bit by a dog and don’t go to the doctor, it takes approximately seven months for your nail to completely grow back.)

After about five minutes I ventured into the bathroom. My face was completely white, including my lips. I looked like I was an extra on The Walking Dead. I splashed some water on my face, and then went back to work like nothing had even happened.

And then I made sure not to tuck my arm under my pillow anymore. Seems to be working.

5 Comments

  1. i think that childhood book was uploaded verbatim to webmd.

    Comment by Alice — October 20, 2011 @ 3:36 pm

  2. Holy cow.

    And also, I read that chart aloud to Paul. It would have been rude NOT to, after laughing out loud so much.

    Comment by Swistle — October 20, 2011 @ 4:34 pm

  3. Oh, my. I am laughing SO HARD at your chart. Most especially the “Are you sure?” and the bit about violently whipping your head back and forth to give yourself a concussion. Sweet Jesus, this is funny.

    I am regularly convinced I am having mini-strokes.

    (Hope your arm feels better.)

    Comment by Artemisia — October 20, 2011 @ 9:37 pm

  4. Last year, I spent 20 minutes at the (golf) driving range and ended up with the exact same pain you’re describing. Because my health care coverage is awesome (and because it got me out of work for a day), I went to the doc who said it was tendinitis. Went away in a week or so.
    But I love the “choose your own diagnosis” chart. That’s how I view WebMD.

    Comment by Kay — October 20, 2011 @ 11:13 pm

  5. Dude, I was so hoping you were about to say…”And then I pooped and it was all better.”
    Pooping is a cure all for me.

    Let us know how it turns out!

    Comment by Nik-Nak — October 21, 2011 @ 10:02 am

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