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Hospi-Tales

~ Acquired Brain Injury (ABI): from the acute hospital to early rehabilitation – more on: www.CaringforPadraig.org and www.ansaol.ie

Hospi-Tales

Tag Archives: hospital

Surprising

20 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by ReinhardSchaler in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

German Federal Labour Court, hospital, Irish government, money

UnknownWhat did I do first thing this morning? – You guessed it. I called my Genossen. It took a while to get through to them, they are busy, even in the early morning. But then the phone rang and on the other end of the line was the person responsible for letting me know that – YES, we got the apartment. Well, it’s 99%. Next week, there will be a “Vorabnahme”. They’ll check that we didn’t destroy the apartment and if the inspector signs off, we’ll be ok to sign the new rental agreement. (Let’s just hope it won’t be the condensation-on-the-window inspector:).

There were two really interesting bits of German news today. Both pretty unbelievable.

imagesThe first one was that one of the big German banks will make large corporations pay (!) if they want to deposit their money with them. Just to make sure you get this: the corporation is putting money into the bank, presumably large amount, and rather than gaining interest from that deposit, the corporation will have to pay the bank a fee for the privilege to accept its money. – Would that be a nice little business for the Irish Government? Charge large German corporations for depositing their money with them? Wouldn’t that solve everybody’s problems? The German corporations would save money, and the Irish Government would get huge amounts of cash at 0% interest to pay for hospitals and neuro rehab, for example. Michael Noonan – do you know about this? It could save us millions!

Unknown2The second one really surprised me – I had heard about this but didn’t think it would still work. It’s a judgement by the German Federal Constitutional Court in favour of a Catholic Hospital that had dismissed a consultant (Chefarzt, no less). What’s surprising or strange about this, you might ask? Surely, doctors get dismissed all the time and there are plenty of reasons for that, as we all know: criminal behaviour, malpractice, and many other reasons. Well, in this case the hospital had dismissed the doctor because… well, because the man got married, though that wasn’t the problem either. The problem was that he had got married the second time! Imagine that. He got married a second time and because of that he lost his job in the hospital because the hospital decided that people getting married a second time should not be allowed to work in a catholic hospital. And the German Federal Constitutional Court decided that the owners of the hospital had a right to expect from their employees to adhere to the its catholic ethos. – I was thinking how lucky that hospital is that they had the spare time and resources to bring this case up to the Federal Constitutional Court to get rid of this doctor because he had got married a second time. Most hospitals I got to know over the past 16 months are struggling to get the basics right. Und überhaupt, wenn das jeder machen würde – wo würden wir denn da hinkommen?

Pádraig had a busy day today. I went to his double physio session around lunch time. They sat him up on the bedside which was brilliant to see. I had asked before whether they could try to transfer him from the bed to the wheelchair without the lift. And today we took the first step in trying. As I was the tallest in the room, they let me have a go too. I think that with a bit of practice, I’ll eventually manage. It’ll be very useful to be able to do that, especially in circumstances when we won’t have access to a lifter, like when we’ll be travelling. (There is a long list of trips, from Connemara, to Georgia, to Alaska.)

Remember? – “The accumulated clutter of day-to-day existence—the lapses of conscience, the unpaid bills, the bungled opportunities, the dust under the couch, the inescapable prison of your genes—all of it is temporarily forgotten, crowded from your thoughts by an overpowering clarity of purpose and by the seriousness of the task at hand.”

 

We have arrived

11 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by ReinhardSchaler in Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

germany, hospital, ireland, neuro, neurological rehabilitation, rehab

Pádraig and I have arrived in Hamburg, Germany. The staff at Beaumont Hospital had got up in the middle of the night today to prepare Pádraig for his second big trip in four months. An ambulance picked us up at the hospital and we arrived safely at Dublin Airport a few minutes later. We had to wait 45 minutes for airport police to complete some paperwork, and then they escorted us to the air ambulance waiting for us on the tarmac. The flight was relatively uneventful and took less than two hours. Out of the plane, into the German ambulance, and off to Hamburg-Eilbek’s Schön-Klinik (no paperwork this time).
Pádraig was brought to the neuro ICU, located in a 2-year old building. Upon arrival, there were about eight hospital staff who checked him in and made him comfortable. I had a 30-minute ‘welcome-talk’ with an ‘Oberarzt’ (senior doctor). She explained to me that they will test Pádraig for multi-resistant bacteria and that his room will an ‘isolation’ room until the swabs will come back. This means, you can only get into this room with a special disposable apron and a face mask for the next three days or so. Once Pádraig has settled in, she is planning to run a number of tests and scans to get a better picture of Pádraig’s condition.
Following a very long day for both of us, I had to leave Pádraig to look for a hostel. It took a while, but with the help of hospital staff who let me use their computer and internet, I found one.
So here we are, Pádraig in his new bed in the Schön-Klinik, me in a hostel not too far away from Hamburg’s main train station – both of us absolutely exhausted. I am writing the first entry into our hospi-tales, something I intend to do every day from now on. I hope these tales from the hospital will help us to stay connected with Ireland, and the town Pádraig and I loved so well. This is a new beginning, with new hope. It’s a new beginning but with a heavy heart.

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