On this special day when we think of
the ladies in our lives my focus is not upon the uncaring political
types that I usually write about but on the girls at the Owen Sound
Hospital who have been attending to my wife over the last week. As I
visit each day I struck by the cheerful and compassionate demeanor of
each and every one of them as they take care of multiple patients
each with a different need and personality equally as competently at
the end of their 12 hour shift as they do at the start.
My old legs ache just after making the
trek from the back of the parking lot and return after fighting with
the parking ticket machine that begs me with $5 each day before it
will let me leave. How must theirs feel after the miles they walk
back and forth from room to room all day only to face another day of
the same tomorrow all this whilst cheerfully taking care of the
sometimes complex needs of each individual in each room. The
knowledge and careful attention to detail to correctly administer the
prescribed care without error must be quite stressful in and of
itself but it is always done with a smile.
A couple of years ago I observed the
same competence and caring from a slightly different perspective as I
was myself of the receiving end of the care, that time in the ICU
where there may be a little less walking for the girls but a more
intense need than up on the 6th floor where-my wife is now
being cared for. How these girls there and elsewhere in similar
departments maintain such a caring and cheerful attitude day after
day, year after year for many of them, is beyond me.
Thank you ladies, during what is a
stressful time for our family as we learn to deal with further
challenges to come it is your care and caring that eases the
transition. These few words simply cannot fully express my admiration
and thanks for you commitment to this work.
2 comments:
I hope your wife enjoys a speedy recovery, Rural. What you write about nurses is absolutely true. My brother, a difficult person at the best of times, was in the hospitable recently for two months. During that time, he experienced nothing but kindness, compassion and patience from the entire medical team. I was deeply, deeply impressed and grateful.
Nurses rightly deserve your praise, Rural. Let's hope that Doug Ford does not decalre them "obsolete -- like hula hoops," as Mike Harris did.
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