Or, "why the psych ward is no place for a dry eye sufferer"
I OD'd (tried to, apparently didn't take enough) and my husband found me 2 hours later. I went to the ER, and they admitted me to the hospital on a "72-hour hold."
The ER staff faxed over a copy of my eye regimen (warm compresses, lid washes, steroid drops, restasis, serum, genteal gel, etc.) and I took a small cooler with my eye drops with me. It was 1am when I got to the psychiatric unit.
During the initial questioning, I told the intake nurse about my dry eye problems stemming from PRK last year. She asked me if I was suing my surgeon. I said, "No," and she went on and on about how, if my eyes were damaged because of the surgery, I should file suit. How to explain to her that this wasn't the result of malpractice but "merely" a complication? I didn't understand her reaction, but it is par for the course whenever people hear about what happened to me. First they ask me, "Aren't there drops you can use?" Then they ask me if I'm going to sue the doctor. Then they say something to the effect of, "Surely this isn't as bad as you're making it out to be."
They had to send all of my eye drops to the pharmacy for "approval," and I waited a long time for them. The nurse told me to go to sleep. I told her I needed to do my nightly routine first. When she finally brought me my drops, the serum drops were no longer cold. She told me she couldn't give me a warm compress. She was very patronizing.
[Did I mention that I was in a freaking hospital? What part of "these prescription eye drops need to be refrigerated was so hard to understand?"]
The next morning, it was a different nurse but the same story. She acted like she was humoring me when she brought me hot water and a wash cloth. She was very patronizing, and I was confused. They were all acting like they didn't believe anything I said about anything, and I couldn't understand why they weren't allowing me to have my *prescription* eye drops.
Now I know. I recently received a copy of my records from that brief hospital stay. This is what the intake nurse wrote about me:
"She was very focused on her 16 month old, alleged eye injury from Lasix surgery, claiming she has bilateral damage to lacrimal ducts, 'dry eyes'. She does not have a pending legal suit as she acknowledges she signed an informed consent which prevented any legal action. This may suggest she may not have sustained injury from the eye surgery but her perception is that she indeed has eye damage...She is very controlling as to what medication she can take due to her eye condition. She was observed to read successfully the consent forms...She states she has visual impairment, yet does not wear glasses..."
She later refers to my nightly eye routine as a "ritual." The morning nurse noted that I was "preoccupied with eye care," when all I did was ask for a hot compress and my eye drops.
They though it was all in my head, that I made up this elaborate, time-consumming routine. It was so enourmously upsetting to be treated that way.
They described me as "anxious, guarded, and paranoid." Well, when I ask for my eye drops, which were prescribed by a real, live doctor for a real medical problem and the nurse sighs and says, "Why don't you try to sleep now," that's bound to make a person feel like they aren't to be trusted with her wellbeing.
The whole thing was a horrible experience (I don't recommend it), and I'm having trouble getting past the "they didn't believe me" shock.
I know from comments elsewhere that some of you don't understand how a person can get to this point, even given how relentless and awful the eye pain is and how numbing the sleep deprivation can make you. So please don't lecture me about how suicide isn't the answer. I know it was a stupid thing to do.
I'm really hurting and I don't know how to get past this.
I OD'd (tried to, apparently didn't take enough) and my husband found me 2 hours later. I went to the ER, and they admitted me to the hospital on a "72-hour hold."
The ER staff faxed over a copy of my eye regimen (warm compresses, lid washes, steroid drops, restasis, serum, genteal gel, etc.) and I took a small cooler with my eye drops with me. It was 1am when I got to the psychiatric unit.
During the initial questioning, I told the intake nurse about my dry eye problems stemming from PRK last year. She asked me if I was suing my surgeon. I said, "No," and she went on and on about how, if my eyes were damaged because of the surgery, I should file suit. How to explain to her that this wasn't the result of malpractice but "merely" a complication? I didn't understand her reaction, but it is par for the course whenever people hear about what happened to me. First they ask me, "Aren't there drops you can use?" Then they ask me if I'm going to sue the doctor. Then they say something to the effect of, "Surely this isn't as bad as you're making it out to be."
They had to send all of my eye drops to the pharmacy for "approval," and I waited a long time for them. The nurse told me to go to sleep. I told her I needed to do my nightly routine first. When she finally brought me my drops, the serum drops were no longer cold. She told me she couldn't give me a warm compress. She was very patronizing.
[Did I mention that I was in a freaking hospital? What part of "these prescription eye drops need to be refrigerated was so hard to understand?"]
The next morning, it was a different nurse but the same story. She acted like she was humoring me when she brought me hot water and a wash cloth. She was very patronizing, and I was confused. They were all acting like they didn't believe anything I said about anything, and I couldn't understand why they weren't allowing me to have my *prescription* eye drops.
Now I know. I recently received a copy of my records from that brief hospital stay. This is what the intake nurse wrote about me:
"She was very focused on her 16 month old, alleged eye injury from Lasix surgery, claiming she has bilateral damage to lacrimal ducts, 'dry eyes'. She does not have a pending legal suit as she acknowledges she signed an informed consent which prevented any legal action. This may suggest she may not have sustained injury from the eye surgery but her perception is that she indeed has eye damage...She is very controlling as to what medication she can take due to her eye condition. She was observed to read successfully the consent forms...She states she has visual impairment, yet does not wear glasses..."
She later refers to my nightly eye routine as a "ritual." The morning nurse noted that I was "preoccupied with eye care," when all I did was ask for a hot compress and my eye drops.
They though it was all in my head, that I made up this elaborate, time-consumming routine. It was so enourmously upsetting to be treated that way.
They described me as "anxious, guarded, and paranoid." Well, when I ask for my eye drops, which were prescribed by a real, live doctor for a real medical problem and the nurse sighs and says, "Why don't you try to sleep now," that's bound to make a person feel like they aren't to be trusted with her wellbeing.
The whole thing was a horrible experience (I don't recommend it), and I'm having trouble getting past the "they didn't believe me" shock.
I know from comments elsewhere that some of you don't understand how a person can get to this point, even given how relentless and awful the eye pain is and how numbing the sleep deprivation can make you. So please don't lecture me about how suicide isn't the answer. I know it was a stupid thing to do.
I'm really hurting and I don't know how to get past this.
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