

Some of you followed the saga of Max's arm. Herewith, the sequel, Katrina's foot......
Katrina gets small blister Saturday, walking for too long in rainboots. Feels fine on Sunday and goes ice-skating as planned. Fine that night.
At school Monday, blister pops, very painful. By Monday night has fever, rare for her. I assume it's one of many colds going around school, put antibiotic cream on blister. She sleeps with me Monday night. Tuesday morning fever gone but blister worse and I keep her home from school, keep putting antibiotic cream on it, and carry her anywhere we need to go. K perky and cheerful all day. Blister remains bad, soak foot in salt water in afternoon and give bath. Around bedtime she begins saying everything itches - notice ankle is quite swollen, mild rash all over. Ask her if she had twisted ankle; she says no. Give more antibiotic cream on blister, give antihistamine and regular lotion all over for itching, and put to bed.
Call my father, a doctor who typically reacts to all medical questions by implying that it's slightly neurotic to consider that something might be wrong. Uncharacteristically alarmed about swollen ankle and wants her to see doctor, even thinking she should maybe see one that night because of mysterious possibility of infection spreading to joint. Defying his advice out of sheer inability to face ER, I let her sleep till morning. She wakes up cheerful and chipper, with the blister itself a little better, but the ankle still badly swollen.
I send her to school but call a pediatrician, get an appointment for that morning, and pick her up at school.
Extraordinarily nice pediatrician concerned about ankle, definitely thinks infection beyond site of wound. About to send me on my way with prescription for oral antibiotics when I ask if there might be infection in joint. She then does protein test, finds elevated levels, indicating a slightly more serious (tho not dire) infection. She decides that instead of oral antibiotics, I should go to hospital and see if they want to drain ankle (I think - may have lost something in translation) or give IV antibiotics. She instructs me to go get Max at school, feed both lunch bc it will probably be a long wait, and then go to Hopital des Enfants, not the tiny private hospital where I went with Max at a cost that depleted his college fund but a public hospital on a sprawling grounds in the middle of city on other side of river.
Feed both kids, download directions to hospital, trace route on map (always a useless endeavor in the city) and, knowing Mark will be home from meeting soon, leave Max alone with instructions to go to Knox Center if Mark not home soon. Max points out that "It is the burnt hand which teaches best", which seems to show remarkable growth in perspective when compared to reaction to own injury, mere months ago, but I speculate that this may have to do more with whose arm the hand is on the end of, rather than to any great maturational leaps.
We find hospital after much driving and cursing, and park, carefully noting that we are on floor "F". Walk out of parking structure and into hospital where they tell us to walk down the street to children's ER. We walk about a block and half, don't find, walk back, and are sent back in same direction, with more clear instructions. Katrina stoically refuses offers to be carried.
Get into children's ER - totally calm cheerful, pleasant music, quiet, clean, comfortable. Play many many games of Uno and solitaire, do Katrina's homework, edit a Policy Matters paper, wait, wait.
Once we are called in extremely nice doctors all gather around, tutting and clucking, while Katrina beams. Foot already looks noticeably better to me, but swelling has turned to a bruise. Get another blood test, slides made from Katrina's blood, remarks that Max never had slides made from his blood exchanged, more waiting, more card games and story reading. Admonitions not to eat in case surgery needed! Local anaesthesia applied to arm and hand in case IV antibiotics needed!
Higher level doctor called in bc of concerns re bruise. Katrina beams, tells story again. Lots of discussion of how brave and strong she is. More beaming.Katrina mentions that she has been training for a well-known race in downtown Geneva this Saturday and wonders if she'll be able to compete. Gasps all around at this stellar athlete, felled by a blister.Blood tests reveal lower level of (bad) protein than at noon that day. I note silently to self that ankle looks almost completely fine now.
Doctor returns with med technician guy and says that they will give oral antibiotics, but that they are prescribing a cast and crutches. Katrina barely able to contain her euphoria. Exhausted mother incredulous. Doctor explains that if she moves foot, infection could spread. Lots of discussion re cast, go to other room, carefully mold cast with cute cast guy continuously asking if Katrina can move "fingers" (meaning toes). Long process. Much discussion of Katrina's bravery.
I note that we won't be able to get jeans off after they put cast on. Mystified doctor and med tech stumped as to how to proceed. I suggest removing pants before applying cast. Much discussion of what a great idea that is. Katrina assumes false modesty at being seen in underwear. I ignore.
As they are putting cast on, I suggest that perhaps we should first put a band-aid over the blister which was the source of the original problem. Much agreement all around. Doctor leaves in search of band-aid and cast guy resumes putting on cast. I ask again re band-aid and cast guy says "oh, right, I forgot".
Band-aid on, pants off, cast on.
I ask if Katrina can wait at hospital while I find car. Katrina left reading book, my coat modestly draped over her naked legs, I walk several blocks to parking structure, pay in advance as is required, go to floor F, no car in sight. Notice that every floor has prominent F indicating the fire exit, while the letter indicating what floor you are on is discreetly hidden on back wall. I run through whole parking structure cursing wildly until finding car, on floor C. Drive out. Payment no longer valid as it took more than 10 minutes to find car. Must get out of car, park, and repay (not in that order).
Long drive home with Amy frantically trying to find the route and Katrina joyfully exclaiming at beauty of night-time Geneva; remarking on bright lights, river and lake views; describing novelty of cast; noting that Max's cast was just white while hers is colored; speculating as to whether pharmacy will give Swiss style crutches or American style crutches, a distinction she has already observed; wondering what classmates will say about injury.
Give prescription to Mark to fill. Mark learns that only one pharmacy is open in Geneva after 10:30 p.m. and it is on other side of river. Katrina is fed and put to bed, amid much discussion of cast.
When Mark gets home, hour later, we give antibiotics and vow to go to school late.
Katrina wakes early, ecstatic about getting to school, practicing crutches. Max resentfully looks on. I remove cast and see that the foot appears totally fine, very slightly bruised. Mark delivers an ecstatic Katrina to school, just late enough that class is in session, having French lesson. Katrina makes grand entrance. Teacher says "ooh la la". Everyone else asks in German about foot. When I pick up later, she is standing in prominent place in hallway, waving crutches around while bevy of older girls looks on admiringly. Beginnings of blister on hand from crutches, I note with horror.
By next a.m. all swelling gone, slight bruise remains. Mark takes kids to school. They have a short day (meaning it ends at 11:30 instead of 1:15) because of major school fundraiser. Medical emergency actually got me out of my responsibilities on decorating committee, which might have been more painful than ER visit, so I think I've come out even, but am left with nagging feeling that getting all of the glory of crutches without any pain or real discomfort is not a good lesson for my attention-seeking girl. Oh well.
While distracted with all of this, Policy Matters is attacked in the Plain Dealer, my quote re "depression-era imagery" makes it into the London Guardian, Sydney Australia paper and USA Today among other places, a check for $37K comes in to Policy Matters, and the Republican debate happens.
The next day Max runs in famous Geneva race called the Escalade. Katrina watches (on crutches).
Katrina gets small blister Saturday, walking for too long in rainboots. Feels fine on Sunday and goes ice-skating as planned. Fine that night.
At school Monday, blister pops, very painful. By Monday night has fever, rare for her. I assume it's one of many colds going around school, put antibiotic cream on blister. She sleeps with me Monday night. Tuesday morning fever gone but blister worse and I keep her home from school, keep putting antibiotic cream on it, and carry her anywhere we need to go. K perky and cheerful all day. Blister remains bad, soak foot in salt water in afternoon and give bath. Around bedtime she begins saying everything itches - notice ankle is quite swollen, mild rash all over. Ask her if she had twisted ankle; she says no. Give more antibiotic cream on blister, give antihistamine and regular lotion all over for itching, and put to bed.
Call my father, a doctor who typically reacts to all medical questions by implying that it's slightly neurotic to consider that something might be wrong. Uncharacteristically alarmed about swollen ankle and wants her to see doctor, even thinking she should maybe see one that night because of mysterious possibility of infection spreading to joint. Defying his advice out of sheer inability to face ER, I let her sleep till morning. She wakes up cheerful and chipper, with the blister itself a little better, but the ankle still badly swollen.
I send her to school but call a pediatrician, get an appointment for that morning, and pick her up at school.
Extraordinarily nice pediatrician concerned about ankle, definitely thinks infection beyond site of wound. About to send me on my way with prescription for oral antibiotics when I ask if there might be infection in joint. She then does protein test, finds elevated levels, indicating a slightly more serious (tho not dire) infection. She decides that instead of oral antibiotics, I should go to hospital and see if they want to drain ankle (I think - may have lost something in translation) or give IV antibiotics. She instructs me to go get Max at school, feed both lunch bc it will probably be a long wait, and then go to Hopital des Enfants, not the tiny private hospital where I went with Max at a cost that depleted his college fund but a public hospital on a sprawling grounds in the middle of city on other side of river.
Feed both kids, download directions to hospital, trace route on map (always a useless endeavor in the city) and, knowing Mark will be home from meeting soon, leave Max alone with instructions to go to Knox Center if Mark not home soon. Max points out that "It is the burnt hand which teaches best", which seems to show remarkable growth in perspective when compared to reaction to own injury, mere months ago, but I speculate that this may have to do more with whose arm the hand is on the end of, rather than to any great maturational leaps.
We find hospital after much driving and cursing, and park, carefully noting that we are on floor "F". Walk out of parking structure and into hospital where they tell us to walk down the street to children's ER. We walk about a block and half, don't find, walk back, and are sent back in same direction, with more clear instructions. Katrina stoically refuses offers to be carried.
Get into children's ER - totally calm cheerful, pleasant music, quiet, clean, comfortable. Play many many games of Uno and solitaire, do Katrina's homework, edit a Policy Matters paper, wait, wait.
Once we are called in extremely nice doctors all gather around, tutting and clucking, while Katrina beams. Foot already looks noticeably better to me, but swelling has turned to a bruise. Get another blood test, slides made from Katrina's blood, remarks that Max never had slides made from his blood exchanged, more waiting, more card games and story reading. Admonitions not to eat in case surgery needed! Local anaesthesia applied to arm and hand in case IV antibiotics needed!
Higher level doctor called in bc of concerns re bruise. Katrina beams, tells story again. Lots of discussion of how brave and strong she is. More beaming.Katrina mentions that she has been training for a well-known race in downtown Geneva this Saturday and wonders if she'll be able to compete. Gasps all around at this stellar athlete, felled by a blister.Blood tests reveal lower level of (bad) protein than at noon that day. I note silently to self that ankle looks almost completely fine now.
Doctor returns with med technician guy and says that they will give oral antibiotics, but that they are prescribing a cast and crutches. Katrina barely able to contain her euphoria. Exhausted mother incredulous. Doctor explains that if she moves foot, infection could spread. Lots of discussion re cast, go to other room, carefully mold cast with cute cast guy continuously asking if Katrina can move "fingers" (meaning toes). Long process. Much discussion of Katrina's bravery.
I note that we won't be able to get jeans off after they put cast on. Mystified doctor and med tech stumped as to how to proceed. I suggest removing pants before applying cast. Much discussion of what a great idea that is. Katrina assumes false modesty at being seen in underwear. I ignore.
As they are putting cast on, I suggest that perhaps we should first put a band-aid over the blister which was the source of the original problem. Much agreement all around. Doctor leaves in search of band-aid and cast guy resumes putting on cast. I ask again re band-aid and cast guy says "oh, right, I forgot".
Band-aid on, pants off, cast on.
I ask if Katrina can wait at hospital while I find car. Katrina left reading book, my coat modestly draped over her naked legs, I walk several blocks to parking structure, pay in advance as is required, go to floor F, no car in sight. Notice that every floor has prominent F indicating the fire exit, while the letter indicating what floor you are on is discreetly hidden on back wall. I run through whole parking structure cursing wildly until finding car, on floor C. Drive out. Payment no longer valid as it took more than 10 minutes to find car. Must get out of car, park, and repay (not in that order).
Long drive home with Amy frantically trying to find the route and Katrina joyfully exclaiming at beauty of night-time Geneva; remarking on bright lights, river and lake views; describing novelty of cast; noting that Max's cast was just white while hers is colored; speculating as to whether pharmacy will give Swiss style crutches or American style crutches, a distinction she has already observed; wondering what classmates will say about injury.
Give prescription to Mark to fill. Mark learns that only one pharmacy is open in Geneva after 10:30 p.m. and it is on other side of river. Katrina is fed and put to bed, amid much discussion of cast.
When Mark gets home, hour later, we give antibiotics and vow to go to school late.
Katrina wakes early, ecstatic about getting to school, practicing crutches. Max resentfully looks on. I remove cast and see that the foot appears totally fine, very slightly bruised. Mark delivers an ecstatic Katrina to school, just late enough that class is in session, having French lesson. Katrina makes grand entrance. Teacher says "ooh la la". Everyone else asks in German about foot. When I pick up later, she is standing in prominent place in hallway, waving crutches around while bevy of older girls looks on admiringly. Beginnings of blister on hand from crutches, I note with horror.
By next a.m. all swelling gone, slight bruise remains. Mark takes kids to school. They have a short day (meaning it ends at 11:30 instead of 1:15) because of major school fundraiser. Medical emergency actually got me out of my responsibilities on decorating committee, which might have been more painful than ER visit, so I think I've come out even, but am left with nagging feeling that getting all of the glory of crutches without any pain or real discomfort is not a good lesson for my attention-seeking girl. Oh well.
While distracted with all of this, Policy Matters is attacked in the Plain Dealer, my quote re "depression-era imagery" makes it into the London Guardian, Sydney Australia paper and USA Today among other places, a check for $37K comes in to Policy Matters, and the Republican debate happens.
The next day Max runs in famous Geneva race called the Escalade. Katrina watches (on crutches).





