Thanks for the update..
Please keep us posted if you will..
It good to hear of his improvement. Having just had a run in with large burns, absolutely wound care hurts!!!!!! There’s nothing like it I’ve ever experienced. Not to mention the pain from the burns themselves. Plus the general reticence of the doctors to prescribe adequate pain medication. May God speed his recovery. BJHMy computer had a mind of its own yesterday - sorry about the incomplete response. I don't know what happened, but here's what I meant to write:
"Mr. M." is doing better than when I was with him a week ago. But he has been experiencing a bit of "hospital psychosis." I was told years ago that it is fairly common for trauma patients to become confused and disoriented and to turn on their doctors and even their families. M has been agitated and paranoid, but the doctors and nurses don't seem concerned. However, he had pulled free his IV and was refusing to go to the procedure room to change bandages. Yesterday he was starting to calm down and all seems better today. They will try a different schedule to change his bandages every third day instead of every day. This will also allow the docs to use general anesthesia. (I've been told that the wors part of burn care is changing the bandages. I shudder just thinking about it.)
I understand that M is likely to be hospitalized for weeks, as opposed to mere days. The expressions of support and concern on the forum will certainly help his recovery. Thank y'all again!
Glad he’s improving. Hopefully he’ll be back to 100% soon. Auto-incorrect does that alot. It changed birds eye view to Buffalo slide glue on me once, and my wife thought my cheese had slid off my cracker.Thank you - that’s very thoughtful and kind of you to say. I really do appreciate the camaraderie that I/we enjoy on the forum, from (mostly) complete strangers.
Autocorrect caught a typo and changed that last word to “stranglers”. I’m sure glad I saw that before I posted. On the other hand, I appreciate all you stranglers, as well.
Be careful out there!
That’s why I hand prime. That many primers and a hopper full of powder that close together still makes me a bit nervous.Glad to hear he's improving. To me a hopper full of smokeless powder isn't nearly as scary as a loading press tube of full of stacked primers. YMMV
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