It takes about two-and-a-half minutes for a hospital patient like me to get out of bed, throw on my slippers and robe, grab the IV pole in one hand and my nephrostomy bag full of that night’s urine drain, open the double isolation doors, don a mask and a protective smock and shuffle my way down the labyrinthine corridors of Hadassah-University Ein Kerem Medical Center’s Sharett Institute in Jerusalem’s Ein Kerem, to the safe room tucked away in the nurses’ training area. All the while, other more agile individuals zip by with looks of empathy and superiority.
Once there, there are usually no seats for this straggler. From time to time, a kindly shelter-goer, younger and more able than me, offers to scootch over or share his or her seat with this eyes-half-closed, tongue-wagging-out portrait of pre-dawn pathos.
At home, in the not-so-distant past, when sirens were just becoming a daily part of our life, Israel’s Homeland Security developed an alert that screeches on every phone in the country, warning that “something” is coming to “somewhere.” I’d get dressed and wait at the top of the stairs in our apartment. If it wasn’t a false alarm (as was the case more often than not here in Jerusalem), and a siren did sound for our area, only then would I trudge down the 42 steps to our shared protected “miklat.”
That seemed like a sound strategy when the missiles were launched by the Houthis in Yemen whose aim is notoriously inaccurate and less frequent.
Not so in the hospital during the 12-Day War with Iran, where the nurses bang on your door and stay with you until you get to your destination, fall or fail.
Hospitalization is already a bitch. Add in missiles and you haven’t created an environment conducive to relief. (Those 5 a.m. blood draws will interrupt anyone’s sleep cycle.)
Fortunately, because of my immunodepleted system, I am back in a private isolation room on the Bone Marrow Transplant ward.
I am admitted on a Thursday and set up my room the way I like it. Midday on a Friday, Dr. Arnon comes to visit.
His expression is resolute.
“It looks like they’re going to have to move you to a different room, on level -4, the basement.”
“It’s not as nice,” Arnon admits. There are no windows, “but there’s an upside: The entire floor is a protected space. So, if there’s a siren, you don’t have to move!”
“But why?” I protest. “I like it here. All my stuff is here. I know the staff and all the protocols.”
“You tested positive for CRE,” Arnon elaborates.
CRE is the dreaded antibiotic-resistant bacteria you really only get in hospitals. CRE is short for “carbapenem enterobacterales.” It can cause pneumonia, urinary tract infections and meningitis, among other ailments. In 2017, 13,000 patients in the U.S. contracted CRE. It preys in particular on immunocompromised people.
While I don’t have any CRE-induced illnesses (yet), the problem is that the other people on this ward are immunocompromised, too. “So, if you’re stuck in
a small, protected space with dozens of other patients, you could spread it to them. On -4, by contrast, everyone has CRE, so it’s not a problem.”
I wonder how they handled Covid in in the early days of the pandemic? I imagine the opposite: Under no circumstances are you allowed to leave your room.
Arnon and I argue back and forth. The head nurse jumps in.
“What if I refuse?” I demand, getting more and more agitated.
“You could do that, but we’re trying to get you better from this infection that sent you here in the first place.”
Eventually, I acquiesce, and an orderly who speeds through the corridor, presumably dreaming of someday changing careers to Egged bus driver, rolls my bed and suitcase to -4.
My face drops even more than I know possible, and I nearly throw a gargantuan tantrum. This is not a series of private rooms with doors and TVs and a place for someone to accompany you to sleep; instead it is one big space with about 25 people, most of them in dire condition, with flimsy curtains between beds to provide a modicum of privacy. They wheel me next to a man who screams every 10 minutes at the top of his lungs in Yiddish-tinged Hebrew, “I don’t want to be here! I need to get out! Save me!
I know what you mean, buddy!
Other patients are groaning incessantly. The beeps and tweets and rhythmic cheeps of the IV machines sound like birds sending out mating calls across the cavernous room. The nurses’ voices seem cranked up to eleven, speaking as loudly as they can, yelling across the expanse. There’s no red button to summon a nurse as you have in a proper ward; you have to catch his or her eye through the curtain which the previous nurse invariably forgets to close. Lights out at midnight? Better bring eyepatches.
How is this supposed to be a place of healing? I wonder. The copious quantity of invisible germs floating around the ward, gloves and smocks notwithstanding, must be astounding.
It is, in short, to paraphrase children’s author Judith Viorst, shaping up to be a most terrible, horrible, no good, very bad way to spend a night.
I am determined to get out of there.
I call my hematologist and insist there must be an out-of-the-box solution. After numerous consultations and an as-expected sleepless night, it is decided I can go home the next day. My wife, Jody, will administer the IV antibiotics herself antibiotics there. A nurse explains exactly how to do it. It’s not what the doctors’ prefer, but it’s a workable compromise and my infection ultimately abates.
If it is my misfortune to have to be hospitalized when missiles from the Middle East come a calling again, I only hope that, by then, my CRE will have resolved and diminutive protected spaces will be but a memory.
I first wrote about floor -4 for The Jerusalem Post.
Photo by German Krupenin on Unsplash
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