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Kitt talks in a hushed voice with Andria Booth, a young
new nurse she is training for the burn unit, while two
of the patient's relatives sit quietly in the room.
Kitt is concerned because the patient has refused to
take any blood products because of his religious beliefs.
If he were to take the plasma, it would reduce the swelling
and retain fluid in his vessels, which would increase
his urine output.
"It won't kill him [to refuse the blood product],
but it will prolong his healing," Kitt said. The
team takes another tack to bump up his urine flow: pump
him with more IV fluids.
Kitt knows just how critical it is to keep watch over
these details, even for patients who appear to be recovering
smoothly.
Once, the unit received a pilot who'd crashed his plane
and was burned over 80 percent of his body. She'd expected
the man to survive, but after a few weeks he started
to deteriorate and died from infections. Another time,
she cared for a man who was burned nearly 100 percent
after a heater exploded.
"You can't predict," she said. "The
man who was burned 100 percent healed like a snake and
never needed a graft. That never happens."
Although there are always anomalies, Kitt said a patient's
attitude can be one of the best weapons in healing.
"More often than not, people who are positive,
functioning and motivated pre-burn are more successful
in healing," she said. "People who are more
negative and less motivated often do worse."
The burn unit cares for about 150 patients a year,
and about 90 percent eventually leave the unit alive.
A patient's recovery can range from days to months,
but usually hospital stays are about a day or day and
a half multiplied by the percentage of burn. (An 80
percent burn victim would likely need about 80 to 120
days to recover.)
Flame and scald incidents are the most common causes
of burning among adults, while the majority of toddlers
arrive with scalds. Early in her career, Kitt discovered
that these accidents can strike anyone, which is both
a blessing and a curse for the people who work with
the victims.
"Here, you get all walks of life, all ages,"
she said. "You also get a huge variety of acuity,
and I like the variety. But the hardest thing is to
see the kids, especially the abuse part of it. It's
hard to remain detached."
Jill Sproul, RN, nurse manager of the burn center,
is a walking example of a child burn survivor.
She was 7 years old when her older sister was struggling
to light a fire on a family camping trip. Her sister
decided to hunt for lighter fluid, but when she began
pouring the fluid into the fire pit, the can ignited.
The fluid turned out to be gasoline. Instead of dropping
and rolling like her sister, Sproul started running.
She was 60 percent burned from the accident and spent
five months in the hospital.
Throughout those five months and the additional hospital
visits during her childhood, Sproul remembers befriending
the hospital staff. The experience prompted her to pursue
a career in burn nursing to help others like herself.
Sproul peeks into the room where Kitt is finishing
the daily dressing change.
"OK, we are going to turn you to your left,"
Kitt says loudly to the patient. After removing three
layers of gauze from his back, she points to the grayish
patches on his motley, burned skin. These sections may
need to be replaced with living skin from other parts
of the patient's body.
Even after any grafting is complete, a new battle begins
to halt the natural hardening of the scar tissue in
the grafted areas. The scars thicken and harden for
a year after the procedure, so patients are sometimes
forced to wear tight, elastic garments to keep scar
growth to a minimum. Other times, the grafted skin areas
fail to sweat, while healthy areas overcompensate by
sweating profusely to regulate temperature. For some,
this means staying indoors on hot days.
Other people on the burn unit focus on helping patients
face the devastating disfigurement. Kitt has seen victims
who lose their eyelids, noses, ears, not to mention
the grafting that can leave faces distorted.
At the moment, though, Kitt is focused on fighting
any infections that are vying to take the life of the
car accident patient. She wipes a strong antibiotic
on his ears, which are at greater risk of infection
because the ears have less circulation than other parts
of the body.
It's been nearly an hour since she, Booth and the burn
care technician started re-dressing the man's wounds.
Kitt admits that even simple dressing changes can be
grueling at times because the skin contact often causes
severe pain.
In the midst of the somewhat somber routine, a quick
smile suddenly flashes across Kitt's face. She's looking
at the urine machine. The patient has won the first
of many small battles: His urine flow is up to 58 cc's.
It is cause for hope that this man who was burning
in his car may be on the road to recovery, and it is
victories like this that Kitt has learned to savor.
"Sometimes, I get overwhelmed with other people's
tragedy, but when an 80 percent burn victim goes home,
that'll make you cry."
Contact Heather Stringer at heathers@nurseweek.com
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