Showing posts with label abroad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abroad. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 September 2015

Busy Busy Busy! And then to Hospital...

Hello, sorry I haven’t written any blog entries in a while, life’s been rather busy over the last few months.  However I now have some time to dictate a new entry for the blog.  Yes dictate.  Due to an injury to my right hand I now have a cast over it and am under strict instructions not to use the hand.  Hence my writing looks like that of a child, with me having to my left hand, and typing is becoming slow and laborious.  Therefore I have chosen to go back to something I did over a year ago, getting my computer to take down what I say.  The technology’s better than what it was last year, with only a few corrections needed, and I’m having to inform it as to when I want punctuation –so please excuse any mistakes I’ve missed out.  Conveniently it is also significantly faster than typing with a little practice.

I should probably update you on the last few months and what has been going on.

In July, as many of you will know, I return to the UK for my sister’s wedding and The Great Yorkshire Show.  I’ll give you a full round up of my trip in a later entry, as there is quite a lot to tell and it deserves its own post.  Not to mention that some of it might want running past my sister first!

August was a month of calvings!  Over 22 by the end I believe.  My recording system wasn’t perfect, either in my notebook or on Facebook.  Those of you who have been following me via facebook will, I’m sure, know that I was noting down each of the calvings giving each a number and describing them in the metaphor of pizzas.  I hope this didn’t put too many of you off pizza, it was either that or put you off all food with descriptions of what are the worst calvings can be like.  Instead I decided to save them all for another blog post!

And finally September.  The events of September really started on the last day of August.  However what happened that day has affected every day since and will continue to affect me until at least the 31st of October.  As of this seems the most pressing topic, but also one of some interest, I will address it in this post.

Once upon a time (11:30 AM 31st of August 2015) in a land far far away (or not, kind of depends on where you are) I was enjoying my typical lovely morning routine, once more trying to wrestle a small cow out of a big cow, while standing in mud, wind blowing in my face, and swearing like a Scotsman.  By this point we had been there for some time and were making slow but good progress.  As this was all going on I noticed one of my knives was out of its sheath and on the grass.  Thinking of my safety and of the safety of those around me I picked it up by the handle to move it out of the way.  However, my hands at this point were covered in a mixture of calving lube, pregnancy juices, cow dung, and mud, causing the knife to slip slightly in my hand.  As it was, with this being a knife I had a recently sharpened, this was enough to cause a small cut in my little finger, and an even smaller one in my ring finger.  I instantly dunked my hand in the large bucket of antiseptic solution we had several times before going to look for a plaster.  It was at this point that I realized that I could not bend the first joint of my little finger.  I had severed a tendon.


Having been bandaged another vet who was conveniently close by came to finish the job for me whilst I ran myself down to the local doctors.  Here the nurses cleaned and dressed my wound.  I was then refer to one of the local hospitals.  Technically we are closer to the Palmerston North hospital, but I live to the west of the Rangitikei river which puts me under the jurisdiction of the Whanganui hospital.  The difference is roughly 10 minutes and all the nurses reassured me that the waiting times would be shorter.  Thus, with my hand neatly wrapped up I was driven by a staff member from work to the hospital.

To some extent it is good that I am used to having a wait at a medical facilities.  With this in mind, before leaving, I grabbed my bag containing things to keep me occupied.  They were very useful.  I was seen to by a very nice English doctor who had arrived in New Zealand a week before.  She was originally from Southern England but had trained in Leeds.  She irrigated the wound, giving it a second cleaning, applied a new dressing, organized for radiographs to be taken, and went to try find her superior.  It turned out as I watched from my little room in the emergency department that it was turning out to be a very busy day for the hospital.  Multiple trolleys were being pulled through with what looked to be very severe cases as well as all the other spaces within the department being filled with patients.  Thus I was left there waiting.  And waiting.

Thankfully I was prepared for this with a book and access to free wifi.  So I quietly waited in the corner of the hospital, as the hospital manager swept the corridor floors and exclaimed that she had never seen it this busy before.  Thus I waited, a patient patient, knowing that there were cases far more in need of help than me.  My doctor was part of the orthopaedics team and her superior was in surgery all afternoon.  When she finally managed to get hold of him he informed her that they were limited in what they could do for my injury.  I would have to go 2 hours south to Hutt Hospital where there was a specialist department.  By this point it was turning toward evening, my injury was not life threatening, and I would not be accepted at the referral hospital until the morning.

I was rebandaged and sent off home for the night, with a few drugs to keep me going.

Saturday 1 September 6:00 AM, I left home to be driven to my next hospital by the practice manager.  The hospital opened at 8:00 AM and we hoped that by arriving early in the morning we will be there before any sports injuries and hoped to be seen to before the afternoon.  I was still going to bring the boredom busting bag though.

I slept most of the way there and arrived to find a waiting room occupied by only two other patients.  That the desk I began to try and fill out more paperwork.

New Zealand has a system called ACC whereby any taxpayer who sustains an injury that work will have the majority, though not all, of that costs of treatment paid for.  They will also cover certain costs such as travel expenses and a certain amount of wages depending upon level of injury and type of work.  Therefore from my point of view it effectively worked like the NHS, but probably better.
New Zealand also has an agreement with the British government.  Any Kiwi who sustains an injury or succumbs to illness within the UK will be cared for and looked after by the NHS.  The reciprocal agreement means that any British citizen who similarly requires medical help in New Zealand will get it, for the most part, free of charge.
Both of these a very simple summaries of the situation but you get the idea.  And I was in the middle.  This caused some momentary confusion for the staff.  However I had already been seen by two other medical facilities and had been given up an ACC number.  This happened at work, I’m a taxpayer, and I was going to get significantly more benefit from ACC than I was from being British –it would later be very useful when they’re prepared to cover part of my wages whilst I am under doctor’s orders not too rectal cows for eight weeks.

After I sat down to wait some more a middle aged man came in with bandaged and blood soaked hands.  We would later be taken off together to both be examined by a doctor.  As it turned out he had also severed a tendon, this one for his middle finger on the right hand, but his cut was on the back of his hand such that he couldn’t straighten the finger.  He had also sustained a number of other injuries to his hands.  He was a site manager for building company and had gone in on Saturday morning to do some quick jobs that hadn’t been done during the working week.  One of those jobs involved cutting through a water pipe which he thought had been shut off.  As it was as he cut through water poured from the metal pipe.  This caught his hand forcing it upwards and into the sharp edge of the pipe above at high speed.
We were both seen by a young Irish doctor who took a history and examines our wounds in the large empty emergency department ward.  As it turned out the doctor used to work at Leeds hospital, and my fellow patient used to live nearby.  It’s a small world.

We were sent up to the plastic surgery department from which the hand specialists worked.  We were put in different wards though I would later see him that evening and he would be leaving surgery as I was about to go in.  In the ward I was given a bed which initially seemed unnecessary.  Out of the window sprawled the city with the hills in the background.  Across from me was an agitated Kiwi who had already been in the hospital since Friday afternoon.  During a last minute job at the lumberyard where he worked here caught his hands on a large circular saw and made a tear that didn’t quite make it down to the bone.  In the bed next to him was a very “interesting” American.  We never asked him a question but he chose to tell the entire hospital how the past month have gone to him.
He was a loud brash bald chap in early middle age.  Visiting him at this time was his elderly father.  Projecting with as much a volume as he could find he told his dad about all of the injustices that had befallen him during that month.  He had been traveling in South East Asia and whilst there had been assaulted and had had a his wallet stolen.  Somehow he ended up being incarcerated by the local police who then preceded to beat him in his cell.  He was then left their enough time such that the bruises healed leaving him with a no evidence of the event when he went to the American embassy.  After this he had come to New Zealand.  For some reason he had been walking through the streets of Lower Hutt.  This is not a tourist destination – Lower Hutt is not a prosperous area and is known for being a place where New Zealand’s criminal gang culture is abundant, as well as having a competitive crime rate.  It is not a place to be loud or brash, nor a place to show off your fancy new phone.  This unlucky American, whilst minding his own business, was once more assaulted, this time having his phone stolen.  He was beaten unconscious and left in the street later to be found and brought to the hospital.
Initially I had been sympathetic for this poor American tourist.  As time went by he continued to shout about his woes and made strongly abusive comments to his meek father, who was trying to help him to pack for the journey home.  Eventually he left and the Kiwi opposite me breathed a great sigh of relief.  Apparently this American had been similarly loud abusive and rude since he had been brought in the day before and then had loudly snored his way through the night.  We were both equally dumbfounded about the events he gone through.  The question was raised of what sort of person, having been assaulted twice in Southeast Asia, then travels to Lower Hutt?  And had he followed the advice many people give for not getting mugged in strange places –primarily keeping your stuff hidden and maintaining a low profile.  Probably not.  We decided that whilst he was very unlucky, there was a good chance he had also been very stupid.  At least we wouldn’t have to listen to him snoring all night.

By 6:00 PM I was guessing incredibly hungry but more importantly immensely dehydrated.  I had been fasting since 6:00 AM in the morning and was hoping the surgery would be done that day.  A nurse had come around earlier to put a catheter into my hand – perhaps they can attach me to a bag of fluids?
I managed to find a passing nurse who went off to go find out what was happening.  As it turned out for some reason the hospital only had one acute surgical suite open for the weekend.  The man opposite me as well as the man who I had come in with were both more serious cases than I and so would be going in before me.  But there also other patients, not to mention other departments, who also wanted the surgical facilities.  This meant that any car accident, caesarean section, or other life threatening problem would come long before us in the list who could wait for a long period of time.
And so it was that the nurse returned with not only news but also sandwiches and water.  Even without being told I knew this was not good news –I needed to be starved for surgery, if I was being given food my surgery would not be happening until the following day.  So I ate my sandwiches, drank and refilled my large litre jug of water a number of times, before finally being served a “spare” meal with ice cream and lots of tea.
Finally my doctor arrived to inform me that they should be able to get to me by the following morning and that I was to be starved from 2:00 AM.  This would mean that I would be able to go home Sunday evening.

Later on that evening the patient opposite me was taken down surgery, had the paperwork done, was prepped for surgery, and then sent back to the ward.  A caesarean section had come in and he would be pushed back to the next day.

The following morning he was taken away early and returned 5 hours later.  Some time later a friend came to pick him up from the hospital and to jubilantly left, finally free after nearly 48 hours in the ward.  That got me to wondering how long it would take offense to repair the site manager.
Eventually they came to collect me at two o’clock in the afternoon.  Despite the fact that I could still walk very well the staff insisted that I be pushed on my bed through the hospital and down to surgery.  Here the paperwork was done, as I watched the site manager brought out of surgery.  I was up next only for a patient I never saw with an injury more serious than my own to be taken into surgery before me.  Only time would tell if I was to be sent back to the ward or actually manage to get surgery this afternoon.
The estimation was good the surgeons believing that they would be able to get to me soon enough.  I curled up on my bed.  The nurse who is looking after me took out a blanket from a heated cabinet by the anesthesia department’s central console and place to over the top me.  Under a nice warm blanket and surrounded by pillows I quickly drifted off to sleep.
When I eventually work nothing appeared to have changed.  The site manager was still opposite me recovering and I could see no nurses thereby.  However I did feel that now was a good time to go for a wee.  So I got off my bed and wandered out, dressed only in a hospital gown, to find a toilet.  Opposite the anesthesia department with two toilets marked “staff only”.  I didn’t know how far I would have to go to find other toilets and it seemed like a waste of time to go find them.  What the heck, there was no one around anyway.  Such a rebel.
It was as I dutifully attempted to wash the one hand that was not covered in bandages that I heard a commotion outside.  I waited a moment by the door of the toilets that hospital management said I shouldn’t use before noticing that someone was saying my name.  I cautiously opened the door to find to agitated nurses who were looking for me.  The surgical table was free!  It was my turn!

I walked into the surgical suite and jumped up onto the surgical table where I would be having the operation.  I was hooked up to a bag of hartman’s solution, electrodes were attached, connecting me to the machine that goes “BING!”, and talked to my anaesthetist.  They were going to use local anesthetic on my arm, excellent idea, and I’m sure he said I’d be put on Halothane, which made me wonder about my recovery.  I had a vague memory of being told something about Halothane being used for humans, but couldn’t remember if it has a good or bad thing.  Either way, I treat animals not people, and a lot of other people had been through this hospital over the course of the weekend and they all seemed fine.  They placed a mask over my face, I took slow deep breaths, and then groggily woke up back on the ward with a new set of bandages.

And that was that.  It would not be until the following Thursday at physiotherapy that I would see the surgical site.  I sat up in my bed with a sore throat and a second catheter in my arm.  The fluids must have worked as I no longer felt so dehydrated, but I was thirsty and hungry.  It wasn’t a long before I was brought a double helping of dinner and 2 litres of water.  I was still groggy and took a couple of naps as I worked my way through the food.  At the end I was offered a cup of tea, and managed to get hold of more ice cream, and began to feel a lot better.
Still recovering from an anesthesia I stayed on the ward overnight.  The next day at 8:00 AM the department handed over to the weekday staff.  They did Morning Rounds, visiting all the wards so the weekday staff knew what was left.  I was all set and ready for home, given the all clear by my Irish junior surgeon.  This only left mean with 3 hours to wait whilst paperwork was completed, just enough time to practice manager to drive back down and pick me up.

Following on from all this I was put on antibiotics, three forms of pain relief (mostly just to keep the swelling down), and am visiting a specialist hand physiotherapist.  I will be back in Hutt hospital on Monday for an appointment with the head surgeon, and going to a hand clinic at Palmerston North hospital in a month’s time.

So, that’s my experience of the New Zealand Health Care System.  It effectively the same as the British one, although they will ask for a bit of money up front to help keep out the riffraff and the time wasters. 
Oh, and its better if you say you did it to work.  Provided you can be back at work within 48 hours after the injury.  Otherwise OSH, which is the New Zealand equivalent of the HSE of the UK start asking questions.  Although that 48 hours doesn’t include the weekend.  I’ll stop now, it’s amazing what you learn off people hospital when you get talking.




Saturday, 14 February 2015

What I did on my long weekend in Taupo & Rotorua

I'm afraid I'm going to have to serialise last weekend, because it was AWESOME!!!

Last weekend I looked into the deep hot brimstone of the earth, was sufficated by it, soaked in it, inspired by it. I saw that which it has made, is making and was told what it will make. Alongside it was the great mountains and waterways it had made, wonders in themselves. All surrounded by the glorious flora and fauna of New Zealand.

This is a basic over view of the weekend. I will try go over what I saw (with pictures) in later posts. I had managed to get a 4 day weekend, due to a Friday state holiday and Monday as Day In Lieu for working a weekend, so decide to explore north to see NZ's land of fire & lakes.

Friday was Waitangi Day, the holiday to celebrate that on the 6th of February 1840 the Maori became part of the British Empire. There are many debates about the events that happened afterwards and the different translations of the treaty, because afterwards people were still being dicks to one another, it just happened to be "legal"now. This year was the first year when there were not significant complaints by major Maori figures, and the young people are seeing it as the holiday to celebrate the Maori people.

So, having woken up late, prepared late, left late, I eventually traveled north to go to Taupo, the north islands giant central lake. On the 21st I will be part of my practice's team doing a relay around the lake, so will tell you more about the area after that.

Near Taupo I visited Craters of the Moon:
http://youtu.be/8KBl6MK9VpM

And the Huka Falls, which is a large waterfall draining Lake Taupo


I stayed over night in my wee cheap tent at NZ's largest free camping spot. Its known to be noisy, but I thought I'd pitch out the way, until a large group of backpakers and Maoris arrived to talk until 1am. At first it annoyed my, as I was tired, but after having a decent nap for an hour that evening it was entertaining to listen to a big fat Maori guy trying desperately to chat up any backpacker who'd listen to him. 

SATURDAY

I climbed the Rainbow Mountain, at the top of which I met a guy who works at the top with a telescope watching out for wild fires in the local forests. Nice guy, invites people to come up to his watch tower and see the views, whilst offering a cool glass of water. He look pictures of everyone who came and puts them up on a Facebook page (that I presently can't find, but will post if/when I do). 




On the way down I visited the Emerald Pool, where I talked to a couple visiting from Sheffield, and we took pictures for each other.



I visited a place called "Mud Pool"... which is a mud pool, but geothermal!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qv9hmZomUec&feature=youtu.be
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=399FYkMk3YY&feature=youtu.be
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXuzTYt2Bwk&feature=youtu.be


I hadn't particularly planned on it, with the heat etc., but people suggested I go down to Kerosene Creek- a local hot pool out in the forests. The river is all warm, with a wide pool created by a slowly moving (due to erosion) waterfall which is a nice Goldilocks temperature. It is surrounded by beautiful forest, and there are a number of small spots along the river for smaller groups. The only down side is the smell- there is significant Sulfur in the water causing a smell that did remind me of the oil and fuel at vintage tractor shows- hence the name of the creek. The place is lovely, but it took me 3 days, 3 showers, 4 lakes, and 2 hours in non-smelly hot pools before I could get the whiff out of my skin.
Oh, and the other down side is the warning sign about the amoebic meningitis. Don't put your head in the water. It will kill you.




After this I went in search of a proper pool to try clean out the smell. I visited Waikite Valley Thermal Pools- a highly recommended site that I'll tell you much more about later. I wish it was closer to home. Utterly amazing place to go to.
http://www.hotpools.co.nz/

Saturday and Sunday evening I stayed with a vet couple from the UK. It was Amy, one of the vets working at the Edinburgh Dick Vet Farm Department that put me in touch with them. Jules and here husband Gus had spent a year in NZ working as vets, before returning home, working for a while longer, then relocating to northern NZ. Jules is a small animal vet and Gus is a farm vet, so we had plenty to talk about and I had a lot to learn from them. Amazingly wonderful people, great to talk to and lovely hosts.

SUNDAY

Sunday was lakes day, with a minor interlude to watch some people try to raft down the local rapids. (If you come to NZ we MUST do this- looks great fun)

I started with a quick stop at the side of Lake Rotorua



I then spent an hour on a walk that should take 15 minutes- but there was too much to see in just 15 mins! The Okere Falls were the site of NZ's first hydroelectric dam. Since then the dam has been destroyed, then excavated and removed to become an exhibit, and the falls returned to a more natural state. Leaving a place perfect for tourists to try out white water rafting (if they can stay on the raft) surrounded by beautiful high cliff over hung by the tropical forest.






After this I went to Lake Rotoiti, Lake Okataina, and Lake Tarawera, having a quick swim in each of them, and the odd walk/jog in the forests. Given the amount of people about its surprisingly simple to find your own personal, private, beach.

Rotoiti

My private beach at Lake Okataina (beyond the brush was a large area of sand)

The boat landing site at Lake Tarawera

After all this swimming I went to see the local tourist info site and managed to get permission to drive down and see the Tarawera falls. I'll let me explain in the video:

http://youtu.be/K9GQq1Ar-3s

That evening I also spotted this "little"chap - some sort of very flat but large cockroach-thing




MONDAY

Due to having worked a previous weekend I was able to get Monday off, so I could steadily drive home. Or madly rush to see more stuff.

I visited the other end of Lake Tarawera






 Found a Maori monument to a dead chief- such great men are remembered by burying their canoe end in the earth to create a tall obelisk, which then has extra decoration added to it.






 I went past what looks to be an interesting museum. Akin to Pompeii but looking like Beamish, the Buried Village was a settlement built near tourist attractions about 100 years ago. These attractions were based on the geothermal activity, which eventually exploded and buried the village. This has left a site where everything was preserved by mud, to later be uncovered and now on display so that one can learn about the earliest travelers to NZ. I didn't have enough time to see inside, but hopefully if anyone with a Beamish bent wants to visit we can go see this- and the old Gold Mine site further North-West that I didn't have time to go visit.



A cool monument I found celebrating the Maori people's work to share their glorious land with tourists.

The Blue and the Green Lakes




 Finally I had a quick stop in the Redwood forest- which became an hour. The redwood trees originally came from North America to make a new timber trade for NZ. This are, however, was kept as a tourist attraction and is filled with routes for people walking, riding, and mountain biking.

As well as the redwoods, a number of the local fern trees have found a home here.



Tree. Big.

Found a cool little lagoon in the forest





These are the toilets. There were designed by an artist to disguise the facilities, using rusted steel with Maori art designs drilled in. Seems odd to say the toilets look nice, but they do.

Leaving Rotorua, near Taupo I visited the site of a large hydroelectic dam where 5 times a day part of the dam is opened to keep a stretch of the river "alive". The water level rises and little falls grow into torrents.


The place is great for a little walk, with lovely views of the valley.

I also found, around a corner, down an old abandoned roadway, some free food:
https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10152789134606977&l=9185868384146794295

Eventually I got a shot of Lake Taupo (sort of, better ones after next weekend)

Then I went to the Army Museum on the way back - didn't have time for the full tour, will do more another time- but they do have lots of tanks and artillery in the car park. I'll post all those photos later.



And I was home in time to repack the ute with vet stuff, unload the exploring stuff, clean some clothes, have Yorkshire Tea, and get a rest before work.

So... that's the short version. I'll try, when I have time, to give more details on the best stuff I saw.

Phew, time for a brew