I’ve been quiet for a few days. The old saying that you can’t fill someone else’s cup if your own well is dry has been true for me this week. Let me explain:
As you all know, I work three days a week. Day one, I had four rooms and a parade of really sick patients in them. One of my patients had leukemia and didn’t know. The doctor and I had to tell her. Still other patients had a host of problems- one guy had a 100% blockage in two cardiac arteries, another had lost so many fluids from a week of diarrhea that his blood pressure was only 70/42. A long day.
The second day saw me treat two coworkers: one a doctor who had a seizure at work. The second, a fellow nurse with SVT and a heart rate of over 200.
The third day was by far the worst. We had a critical incident. Let me explain. EMS brought in a woman who was in cardiac arrest. She was also 38 weeks pregnant, and had been down for about 40 minutes when she came in. I was the team leader.
When you work a cardiac arrest in the emergency department, what we call a “Code,” there are numerous jobs.
- There is the recorder, whose job it is to write down every single lifesaving act we take, drugs given, etc. That person also is the time keeper. Things like “Two minutes to the next pulse check, three minutes to the next dose of epi,” things like that. This is always an RN.
- There is at least two compressors. Their job is to perform chest compressions, and there are two so they can switch places when they get tired. Literally anyone who works in the ED can do this job.
- A Respiratory therapist, who is in charge of ventilating the patient and maintaining the patient’s patent airway.
- One nurse or paramedic who is in charge of IV access.
- A doctor, who is in charge of making all decisions.
- The team leader, who runs the defibrillator and handles all of the drugs. This is always an RN, and usually a well experienced, senior one. They work with the doctor to ensure that the patient gets the proper treatment.
One of the sights that I will never forget is what that lifeless baby looked like when they cut her mother open to rescue her. Another sight that I won’t forget is looking across the patient and seeing the nurse who was the compressor continuing to do her job as tears poured down her face. It was heart wrenching.
In total, we worked on that mother and her baby for over an hour.
We wound up getting mom’s pulse back. We lost the baby. We still had six more hours to go in our shift, and we still had patients to take care of. The most jarring thing about it was that you would walk out of a room where you just spent an hour trying to save a dead baby, only to hear your patient demand a turkey sandwich. Codes involving the death of a child are always hard. In fact, it was one such call years ago that had me seeing a shrink for a couple of years.
Emergency nurses are some of the most jaded people I have ever known. They are used to seeing tragedy on a daily basis. It isn’t unusual for us to work several codes in a shift. What is unusual is to work a code on a child or on a pregnant mother. In fact, we only do that once or twice a year. Add to that, many of our nurses are recent or expecting mothers. Adults dying? That hasn’t bothered me in years, but when a child dies, it’s like a little piece of you dies with them. It’s heart wrenching and it takes weeks to get over it.
For the rest of the day, you would enter a medication room or a storage closet to find a nurse in there crying. Two of the nurses were doing so poorly that they had to be sent home for the day.
Me, I did OK for the remainder of the shift, even though I was on the verge of tears. I held it together and went home. As soon as I saw my wife, that was when it hit me. I sobbed like it was my own child that I had lost, and did so for about 20 minutes. Then I drank some booze and went to bed. I didn’t speak very much to my wife for a couple of days. I didn’t blog, except to post some posts that I had already written and was saving for later. I ate very little.
I feel better now, but you can’t imagine how hard it is to hold a dead baby. I still see that child’s face at night. The only thing that enables me to sleep is the knowledge that we did our job well, and managed to save the mother. I can’t think of a single thing we could have done differently that would have made a difference, and that is what will enable me to go back to work.
20 Comments
Ken Morgan · November 2, 2025 at 9:46 pm
Damn, man…give yourself a bit more time for inner peace. You’ve got a soul busting job
Dan · November 2, 2025 at 9:47 pm
Yeah….ER medicine is not for the faint of heart. There are no tricks to dealing with it. You either find a way or you crack. And while the vast major of peds cases are boo boos, sniffles and an occasional broken arm a few are horrific. Anyone who isn’t deeply affected by the death of a child is almost certainly a sociopath and probably should be locked up. You HAVE to learn to leave your work at work. Otherwise you won’t last…and may end up shuffling off this mortal coil prematurely.
Stealth Spaniel · November 2, 2025 at 9:49 pm
My mother was a nurse and she said the worst day was when a child died. She could deal with everyone else, but she said that children made her feel like she failed God somehow. A new life is supposed to be nurtured and protected-and yet we always can’t save them. My sympathy on your very trying day.
Divemedic · November 3, 2025 at 8:18 am
I understand the feeling of failure. I still have this feeling of loss, as if I failed somehow, even though I know that there is nothing more that I could have done, it still hits hard. I feel like something is missing, that some part of me has been lost, and I didn’t even know the mother, and never knew this child.
It makes me realize that I was one of the only people to ever lay eyes on this child, and no one will ever know her. Not even her mother.
I’ve been here before, and sadly, I will be here again. It will take time, but things will get better.
Zack · November 2, 2025 at 10:28 pm
Damn, man. That’s a rough one. Prayers for you. Take care of yourself. Maybe see the chaplain, as my military friends are known to say.
ColdSoldier · November 2, 2025 at 10:29 pm
Losing a kid sucks. When I was rookie in my first year I had a 2 year old find mommas gun underneath the seat in her car and proceeded to shot himself right between his eyes. In 5 o’clock traffic.
As soon as I saw the kid I knew he was dead. A nurse stopped. I knew her since I was a kid. We went to church together. She tried in vain.
Losing kids sucks.
DW · November 2, 2025 at 10:53 pm
God bless you sir. Will keep you in my prayers, but glad to hear you’ve reconciled in your mind that you did all you could. Hang tough with that knowledge, because God knows we need a ton more folks like you.
Exile1981 · November 2, 2025 at 10:56 pm
For once i’m kind of at a loss for words, so i’ll leave it at this ..
Thanks for doing a job most of us would not be able to do day in and out.
Big Country Expat · November 2, 2025 at 10:59 pm
Damn Bro… I hope you find some peace… you did what you could. It’s ALWAYS the kids that tear you up the worst… I know you’re not big into it but I’ll say a prayer or two for you and the lil ‘un.
Derak · November 2, 2025 at 11:47 pm
My dear man…
That you have such depth of compassion for a child you lost that was not your own brings me to tears. I lost my own child so very many years ago to what I now conclude was a vaccine death. I struggled for years coping with that death. It never ever goes away. It is forever a heart being dug out with a sharpened spoon. Visceral, tragic, unrequited.
God hears. Time heals. I am glad to know that there are many in your “system” that are still human.
God bless.
I pray for you and your staff that they are comforted.
Mark J · November 2, 2025 at 11:48 pm
Peds patients are always difficult in many respects, and losing one is always a stab in the heart. I have been fortunate in not dealing with that yet, but the worst one I had was actually a 7 yo girl that wanted to kill herself by cutting. To this day the images of that little girl who should be playing with dolls instead of a knife always haunts me, the dichotomy of what she tried to do and her demeanor while I transported her to the psych center was jarring to me.
Good to know your support system (i.e. wife) was able to be there for you.
Wandering Neurons · November 3, 2025 at 12:40 am
Having a paramedic race to the ambulance you’re driving, baby not breathing, bandaid clinic that’s referred to as a hospital is 20 minutes away. Helicopter not available due to weather. Not enough diesel in the fuel tank to save the infant.
It sucks, but something inside keeps you going on to the next call, the next patient. In the downtime, it hurts and memories come back.
Hang tight, you’re doing a mitzvah out there.
Grumpy51 · November 3, 2025 at 1:14 am
Peace brother.
You have a way with words that cuts across classes and education.
For those who don’t know – you never really get over it, just through it. And its why emergency services folks are jaded, full of black humor, and tend to be pessimistic (or maybe just realistic or pragmatic).
Those “patients” wanting a turkey sandwich and cursing you out because I was a bit slow?? Eh? FO!
And yes, I AM burned out….. too much crap, stupid, and lying/manipulating going on…. From patients AND from admin. 44 years will do that to you. The difference a simple thank you makes…..
Like I said – Peace brother (and to the sisters there). To paraphrase a VN veteran’s phrase – I know I’m going to heaven, because I’ve spent my time in hell here.
Sandy · November 3, 2025 at 2:18 am
My heart breaks for you. As an RN, I was accustomed to elderly death. The cycle of life, as it were. But seeing infant or pediatric deaths (as I did in my own family twice, a 4 year old and a fifteen year old) can break you. Rest easy my friend, you did your best and everything that you could. Only God determines who lives and dies.
Old Maine Farmer · November 3, 2025 at 5:00 am
You still have your emotions and your heart for people, which is wonderful. I have lost two babies and two sons in their 20’s, I know about pain as well.
Sometimes the story turns out wonderfully in situations like yours. I pilot I flew with in the Navy was doing carrier quals away from home when he got a call; his 9 months pregnant wife was found on the floor of their house in a coma. He flew home. They did emergency surgery just like what happened with you, but the baby was saved. The mom, however was brain dead; no brain waves. They kept her alive for a few months, then blip, blip; not brain dead anymore. When I met her, she was just fine; a slight lisp but you could almost mistake it for an accent. She had to learn everything all over again, but she did and they were a happy family. All because medical folks didn’t give up. Perhaps the Lord figured that baby would be better off with Him.
Michael · November 3, 2025 at 7:38 am
We cry because we care but we keep doing compressions.
Been there friend, will be there again but we care so we continue to do compressions.
Who is YOUR CAREGIVER friend? What is your relief? Those without burn up or burn out and your too important to fail like that.
Praying for you buddy
Divemedic · November 3, 2025 at 8:23 am
I’m healing. My wife is not just my best friend, she is my support when things are like this.
I continue to do this because I am good at it, and someone has to do it or it won’t get done.
Seamrog · November 3, 2025 at 10:17 am
I am sorry for your suffering, truly, and I appreciate your call to nursing and caring for people who need help. I want to offer a heartfelt suggestion.
Open you heart to your Creator. We (and your patients) are not meant for this world, that is passing away as we breathe. We can only exist sanely in relationship with the One who breathed existence into us and who wants us to know, love and serve Him. Death is terrible, and only bearable in the knowledge and faith that it has been conquered by the most remarkable sacrifice of all, done so you and I can share in the consequences of it eternally.
You will be in my prayers.
Divemedic · November 3, 2025 at 10:32 am
I truly appreciate your caring, your advice, and your prayers. I mean that.
JimmyPx · November 3, 2025 at 10:18 am
Humans have a wonderful instinct to protect the young.
It’s why if a kid falls down a well, 100 people will come and try to save them.
A little one dying is just frigging horrible. I work in a large hospital and the Peds departments don’t bother me because even if a kid is hurt but on the mend it’s ok.
But I just can’t go on the pediatric oncology ward, I just can’t handle it.
To see the little ones like that most of whom are going to die is like a punch in the gut.
We’re all human and anyone with a heart would be horrified by what you went through. If the day ever came that you were “meh” about it, that’s the day you should leave nursing.