Two days and one scheduled Student Health appointment later, we found ourselves walking a mile and a half in the ice and snow, Elizabeth's ankle swollen to the size of a grapefruit and hardly mobile, searching for the Student Health building - which, as it turns out, is not anywhere near its street address. From there, a snooty receptionist and unimpressed doctor sent us - walking - another half a mile downtown to the radiology center, where we saw the bad news: fractured fibula. On the bright side, the fibula is not a weight-bearing bone.


Sorry about the confusion, we know it's a little hard to find! We've now drawn pink circles around the fracture in both photos - just click on them to zoom in.
From there, Elizabeth was referred to the Central Hospital (in Finnish, conveniently "Keskisuomenkeskussairaala"). We had no idea where that was (still don't, actually), but the radiology receptionist reassured us, in broken English, that we could just ask the bus drivers if they were going there. Comforting. To their credit, however, we did catch the bus there, and were checked in almost immediately, at 7:00 pm. Then began the long process of waiting. And we mean LOOOOOONG.
Thank God we'd had the foresight to buy a couple of novels and Subway before catching the bus there, because we were in the waiting room for a grand total of 10 hours. Ten hours. That meant ten hours without pain medication for Elizabeth - though we did think she was doing a bit better than the young Finnish guy sitting across from us, whose hand had been bitten by a dog and was actively bleeding for no less than 8 hours. We passed time reading, being annoyed at the hospital staff, and dozing in uncomfortable positions, before Elizabeth was called into a room around 5 in the morning.
When we finally emerged from the hospital, Elizabeth's leg had been set in a cast, and we were both exhausted beyond belief. Needless to say, we spent a good part of the day catching up on our sleep, and now, in notably better spirits, Elizabeth is chipping away at the upper portion of her cast (we can't figure out why a cast to stabilize her ankle needs to reach up to her knee), and working on a way to stick her enormous foot into a sneaker. Hehe.
OK, I can not do anything about socialized medicine but I am now willing to contribute to a taxi fund if it would help matters.
ReplyDeleteOops, NCSU vs. Duke starting, got to go.
Be careful!
Allen R.
Elizabeth:
ReplyDeleteRemember I told you about wearing socks on top of your shoes when walking on ice. It works, no slipping at all.
G.
A fracture with all the milk you drink? Take my advice, don't stick objects down your cast to scratch, it only makes the itching worse. And lastly, sharpen your razor...things could get ugly. Hang in there Ebet.
ReplyDeleteCindy
Clearly, I have no natural radiology talent. I can't tell where the fracture is. I'm glad you got it all straightened out (small joke, haha) and are on the road to recovery.
ReplyDeleteDo they sell mini-crampons that you strap on your shoes? They worked well for us when we went to the Grand Canyon in January.
btw, what novels did you read?
Robin P.
Elizabeth, what's the comment about why should the cast go over your knee?? You worked in the Athletic Training Room, you know that one - a cast has to stabilize the joint below AND above the broken bone in question or you can have rotation/movement of the fracture. So PLEASE, resist the temptation to cut it down. It's for your own good. I'm going to stop being a mom now. Hope you are having fun! -Korey
ReplyDelete