A Nurse Saved A Flatlining Patient. Then The Surgeon Blamed Her-nhu9999 - Chainityai

A Nurse Saved A Flatlining Patient. Then The Surgeon Blamed Her-nhu9999

The call came at 2:47 in the morning.

“Code Blue, OR Seven. Cardiac arrest mid-procedure. Repeat, Code Blue, OR Seven.”

The announcement cracked through St. Meridian Medical Center so sharply that even the machines seemed to pause before continuing their steady beeps.

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I was on the third floor changing an IV bag for Mr. Hanley in Room 318.

He was a retired school principal with a thin blanket tucked to his waist, a crossword puzzle on his tray, and the kind of grin that told every nurse he had probably been trouble since 1968.

He looked at me and said, “That sounds bad.”

The hallway smelled like disinfectant, old coffee, and the faint rubbery heat from the floor buffer that had gone through an hour earlier.

I tightened his line, checked the drip chamber, and looked at his monitor.

“It is,” I said.

Then I ran.

I did not think about my feet aching from an eighteen-hour shift.

I did not think about the sandwich in the break room that I had opened at midnight and never eaten.

I did not think about Dr. Marcus Webb or his reserved parking space or the way he said the word “nurse” like it was something stuck to his shoe.

I thought about OR Seven.

I thought about a heart stopping in the middle of a procedure.

I thought about how quickly a room full of trained people could become a room full of witnesses if the wrong person froze.

St. Meridian Medical Center sat in Cedar Falls, Ohio, between a small Baptist church, a twenty-four-hour diner, and a bank with a giant American flag snapping above Main Street every morning.

Everybody in town knew the hospital.

Everybody knew which nurses were kind, which doctors were late, which residents cried in the stairwell after their first bad night, and which surgeon parked in the reserved spot even when he was not technically on call.

Dr. Marcus Webb loved that spot.

He loved his tailored white coat.

He loved his monogrammed cuffs.

He loved the way interns stepped aside before he even reached them.

He did not love being corrected.

Especially not by nurses.

Especially not by me.

Three months before that night, I had stopped him from ordering a medication at the wrong dose for a patient with renal failure.

I had said it quietly.

I had said it with the chart in my hand.

I had said it in front of only one resident and one pharmacist.

It still made his face harden like I had slapped him.

After that, he stopped calling me Nurse Reyes.

He called me “third floor.”

As in, “Third floor, move.”

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