a mystery and a miscommunication
kelly | 4 December 2008 - 5:38pm
Last evening during rescue squad duty we were called to the house of an elderly man who had fallen. A friend had helped the man to his bed and, concerned about possible injuries, called 911. He reported that there was blood in the patient's mouth and also some on his arm.
The patient wasn't complaining of any pain. I did a brief physical examination and didn't find any injuries. The blood on his arm seemed to be from an unrelated scrape which was bandaged but leaking out a bit. The corners of his lips appeared to be crusted in dried blood, so I asked him to open his mouth while I peered inside with a penlight. There were no cuts that I could see, but his tongue and teeth were coated in a sticky dark substance. My first thought was that it resembled coffee grounds. If he'd been vomiting "coffee grounds" it could suggest internal bleeding. But something didn't seem quite right. It almost looked like...
"Sir, have you eaten any chocolate today?"
"He eats Oreos all the time," his friend said.
"Did you happen to eat any Oreos today, sir?" I asked.
Yes he had, he said. I was still leaning close to him, and as he spoke I smelled a faint whiff of chocolate on his breath. (He'd also had a delicious fudge dessert at the retirement community dining hall, he added contently.)
Because he'd fallen, we transported him to the hospital to get checked out. At one point during the ride, I was taking his blood pressure as another EMT was trying to call ahead to the hospital. But the ambulance's cell phone wasn't charged.
"Dead," the EMT announced, holding the cell phone. "Dead as a doornail."
I glanced up at him, a bit surprised (and amused) by what he'd said, knowing he had no clue how it sounded. And before I could reassure our patient, he said from the stretcher, "I sure hope you're not talking about me."
- 233 reads


Ha! Old men are cute. Love it.
You got an award. Come on over and see it! http://www.buggeringcrapmonkies.com/2008/12/ive-been-rewarded.html
If I knew you were the EMT on duty...I would fall every night.
What William said. No, wait, I already do fall every night.
So, it was Oreo overdose, wasn't it? If I had a nickel for every time...
(I am so proud of you and your little emergency-responding self)
I would be so uncomfortable and out of my element responding to real emergency calls, but if they were all of the "chocolate overdose" type? I could be all, "Oh don't worry sir, you'll be fine. It happens to me all the time."
EMTs always have the best stories. :) (Feel free to share the gory ones, too...)
love it!
These are the stories that are going to get you through the tough calls. May all your emergencies be cookie related.
I transcribe 'coffee ground emesis' on a daily basis. not once have I gotten an 'oreo ground', that is hysterical!!