I’ve been thinking about magnetic resonance imaging, sleeping bags, allergies, and great hospitals.
November 22, 2011 | In: I've Been Thinking
Grateful for an MRI
Well, I went in for an MRI, and the diagnosis was not good: Claustrophobia. But I’m getting ahead myself.
While studying x-rays of my shoulder, my doc ordered an MRI. I told him we were nearing eight on the pain scale and pressed for the earliest appointment.
Seven o’clock the next morning, after being scanned for metal, a rad tech strapped me to the transport board and pushed a button. Moving into the magnetic abyss, I felt like dead man walking. Except, I couldn’t walk. But I could talk. It took about two seconds to find my authoritative voice: “I NEED OUT NOW.” She got the hint, and I was pardoned.
I asked her not to tell anyone, throwing in HIPPA. She kindly assured me it happens all the time. Okay, I didn’t pass. But, she says I didn’t fail. We’re calling it an incomplete.
She said something about rescheduling so we can get those shoulder pictures. I said, “What shoulder?” She mentioned the sedation option. I relented.
So, I determined to take my mulligan. The plan was to put me under while stepping up to the tee the following week.
While it felt like I left the building wearing a scarlet C, I experienced more shudders than shame. I couldn’t shake the hemmed-in feeling. On the drive home, I entertained stopping by the dealership and buying a bigger Audi.
Truthfully, I was blindsided. I was looking forward to a horizontal half hour. Looking back, though, clues were available. As a kid at camp, I couldn’t zip up a sleeping bag. Not if I was in it. Still can’t.
While watching news of the Peruvian miners who had to Houdini their bodies into a narrow capsule to be lifted to light and life, I recall thinking I’d probably stay in the hole. Just thinking about it begs for Clonazepam.
I surmised that either Rumsfeld and Cheney aren’t claustrophobic or they’d never had a closed MRI, else they would not have settled for water boarding.
Before I got home, I flashed back on how up to her last April 14, my mother reminded me that on that day in 1948 I refused to deliver. My head came out, but my shoulders (yes, my shoulders) wouldn’t. They were too broad to negotiate the passage. Not to minimize mom’s trauma, but apparently I didn’t appreciate the delivery myself. I’ve got forceps marks on my head to prove it.
Finally, I remembered Jesus’ words, “Unless a man is born again, he cannot enter the kingdom of heaven,” and the puzzled listener who rhetorically asked, “Can a man enter a second time into his mother’s womb and be born again?” Good thing Jesus was talking metaphorically because I don’t know if there’d be any hope for me if one had to be born again physically.
Perhaps that’s what I was feeling at the entrance to the MRI. Been there. Done that. Not interested.
Did I say I asked to have “MRI” added to the “allergies” field in my EHR?
I got my second chance last week. They put me under before strapping me down. No problem. However, as the Capital One commercial suggests, it pays to ask, What’s in your wallet? The magnetic strips on all five credit cards in my jeans got fried.
Today, we looked at the digital images. My left rotator cuff, though photogenic, is torn. Surgery? Hmm. Decisions.
On this Thanksgiving eve, I’m grateful for sedation and MRIs—In that order.
I’m thankful for Virginia Mason Hospital and Medical Center (VM), my health-care provider, whose groundbreaking efforts have applied Toyota’s lean principles to increase quality and reduce the cost of healthcare. From top to bottom, VM lives up to its mantra: Team Medicine.[1] All this, when most people in our world will never be touched by a qualified physician or treated in a hospital that could pass a Joint Commission audit.
I’m also thinking about the wide swath of nurses, pharmacists, physicians, informaticists, technology developers, healthcare writers, and journalists (among others) who drop by my column now and again while helping hospitals move from good to great. As one of your many beneficiaries, this Thursday I’ll be giving thanks for you.
Happy holidays,
Noosh
[1] Last month VM rolled out bar-code-enabled medication administration (BCMA). While entering the game after a couple thousand other U.S. hospitals, I predict VM will soon be with the front of the pack helping all of us learn how to do it even better because they are applying Toyota lean principles along their bar-code path. Read an inspiring conversation about the VM team philosophy and processes by Gary Kaplan, CEO, in which I had the honor of participating.
4 Responses to I’ve been thinking about magnetic resonance imaging, sleeping bags, allergies, and great hospitals.
Dennis Tribble
November 27th, 2011 at 8:23 am
Mark,
I, too was surprised by my claustrophobia when enduring an MRI. I made it through, but the neurosurgeon complained bitterly about the poor quality of the image. Apparently I squirmed. What an amazing thing to learn about one’s self at our age!
I also had an MRI for a torn rotator cuff. I elected not to have the surgery, but did physical therapy instead until my insurance called “hold! enough!” I still think it was the better choice for me. What I remember, though, was watching on the fluoroscope as they injected my shoulder with steroids for some immediate relieve and being able to see both 4″ tears in my rotator cuff. On a fluoroscope!! If they were that visible, why did I have to endure an MRI??? It makes me wonder how often we swing the heavy hammer when a light tap with a small mallet might work just as well.
Dennis
Michael McDaniel
December 22nd, 2011 at 1:19 pm
Yep, a few weeks ago I found out via an aborted MRI that I am NOT going to be in a tube that small, awake, ever again. From that point on I’ve continued to have small shudders just remembering opening my eyes and seeing the tube just inches in front. There, I just shuddered again! It was also for a suspected torn right rotator cuff. I’ve decided to just live with it. Over the past few months my range of motion has gotten better and the pain, less.
Jay Andres
January 25th, 2012 at 11:28 am
Had my first one a few weeks ago at age 55 for what turned out to be a shoulder impingement. I remember hating dogpiles back in my football days, however this was much worse. Here in Dubai they are not fond of providing anti anxiety drugs, however they did have a nice lady from the subcontinent who makes 700 dirhams a month, who helped out. Normally she is a janitor, except when some one flips out during an MRI. She is then called upon to talk you through it. She does not provide any advice, she simply talks and talks and talks. Her rudimentary stats revealed that well over 50% of the patients need here services. She even provided me some stats by nationality. She claimed to be able to spot her future patients as soon as they walk through the door. All this for 700 Dirhams a month. Look it up, it is not much, but she sure does enjoy her work.
mark
January 25th, 2012 at 5:43 pm
That’s funny. They could pay me 700 DOLLARS a minute to sit still under an MRI and that wouldn’t even work.