Each has a set of criteria and writers have a maximum of 55 hours to write up to 500 words and submit their story. Sometimes I just can't come up with anything, other months I manage to get something in.
This January the criteria spoke volumes to me. Reading of the appalling numbers of Covid-19 in the UK swamping the NHS including the hospital group where I worked and many of my former colleagues still do, this story almost wrote itself. The fact that the first Friday of January was also the 1st of January was significant.
The criteria:
- Each story had to begin at sunrise.
- Each story had to use the words SIGNATURE, PATIENT, BICYCLE. (Longer variations were permitted.)
- Each story had to include a character who has to make a CHOICE.
You have two
critical patients in resus. Both need to transfer to Intensive Care for
ventilation. There’s only one bed available.
You’re fed up with
people who claim doctors think they’re God. How many times have you heard the
tired old joke about the difference between God and a consultant? But it’s down
to you now to choose which one gets the ventilator. And you know that later
today there’ll be more who won’t even get a 50% chance.
At the end of each
difficult day –there hasn’t been any other for months– you think of the best
thing that happened. Sometimes it’s just that you actually got to drink a
decent cup of coffee during your shift. Usually if there’s coffee at all, it’s
the crap from the vending machine or a tasteless brew made from the last congealing
granules in the bottom of an old jar in the staff room.
This morning, you
stopped by the pond to take a breather, to gaze and admire. You revelled in the
glorious feeling of freedom. London has its moments. You took a deep breath and
watched it plume on the frosty air as you exhaled. You heard birdsong – there’s
hardly any traffic on New Year bank holiday mornings.
As you pushed off
for the last leg down the hill to the hospital, you envisaged the state of the
Emergency Department. There’d be drunks sleeping it off from last night’s
revels, cuts and bruises from alcohol induced falls, wounds from fights. You’ve
seen it all before. But this year there’s the added factor. How many of them
are now positive? If there’s a demographic that won’t be responsibly socially
distancing, it’s those crowding into the centre of London to see in the New Year
with the help of alcohol.
As you approached
the hospital, you counted the ambulances stacking up.
And now, kitted
out in full PPE – which, while vital, only impedes the normal examinations you
need to make, you have to choose. An elderly, but previously fit man, tested
positive, gasping for breath. Or the young reveller, a near-lethal
cocktail of drugs and alcohol in his system, with severely depressed respiration.
He has a history – he frequents the department. You’ve revived him on more than
one occasion. He’s only alive because of your previous interventions.