The Greek Doctor's New-Year Baby. Kate Hardy
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âSo they never really get to do any of the work and they donât feel part of the team.â
âExactly,â Madison said. âWeâre organised nowadays so the team means a whole department, rather than the old way of having a âfirmâ of a consultant, registrar and house officers who always work together, and in a way thatâs a shame because it makes it harder for junior doctors to settle into the team. I really think students need a single point of contact in a department to help them feel theyâre really part of whatâs going on. Yes, they have to sort out their logbooks and what have you, but they also need proper contact with patients and they need real jobs to do if theyâre to get the best out of their attachment.â
âResponsibilities for something practical, such as a departmental audit,â Theo suggested.
That earned him another of the gorgeous smiles. âAbsolutely. On our ward, we have two students at a time on attachment. Iâm responsible for bedside teaching, and they attend my clinic and theatre sessions.â
âAre you pure obstetrics?â Theo asked.
She nodded. âThough Iâm interested in foetal medicine as well.â
âSo what about the gynae work?â
âI liaise with the consultants and the other registrars so the students get sessions with them, tooâbut Iâm still their point of contact if theyâre worried about anything, or if they want to see more of a particular subspecialty outside pure obstetrics. I also get them to spend time with the midwives, so they develop a rapport and a bit of respect for our colleagues, as well as a chance to see some low-risk births.â
âInstead of thinking that life in our ward is all epidurals and emergency sections,â Theo agreed. âThat sounds good. I notice you have a sensory room here.â
âAnd a water-birth suite. We want our mums to have the best, most natural and relaxing experience possible. Our midwives are fantastic, and we only intervene when weâre asked for help.â
âAmen to that,â he said feelingly.
The emergency registrar met them practically at the door and gave them a swift handover. Theo recognised the manâs voiceâhe was the one whoâd swept Madison off her feet at the ball. Yet Madison didnât greet him as if there was anything more than a professional relationship between them. And Iris had said that Madison hadnât met the man to come between her and her career. So did that mean she was single after all?
Crazy. He shouldnât even be thinking about her like that.
And yet he couldnât take his eyes off her. There was something about her. Something that made him want to break all his personal rules.
Which was even crazier.
The registrar introduced them both to the patient, then left to see the next on his list.
âMrs Ellis, Iâm Madison Gregory and this is Theo Petrakis,â Madison said. âEd called us from the maternity department. I understand youâve been having back pain.â
Mrs Ellis nodded. âAnd it hurts here.â She pointed to her groin, and clearly the movement hurt her because she grimaced.
âHas it been going on for long?â Madison asked.
âIâve had twinges for the last week, but today itâs absolute agony.â She dragged in a breath. âPleaseâIâm not going to lose the baby, am I?â
âAches and pains are pretty common in pregnancy and they donât necessarily mean that youâre miscarrying or thereâs a problem with the baby,â Madison reassured her, âbut youâve done exactly the right thing coming to see us. Do you mind if I examine you?â
With the patientâs permission, she examined Mrs Ellis gently but effectively, then listened to the babyâs heartbeat. âThatâs nice and strong, so try not to worry too much. The babyâs doing just fine. But what we need to do is stop this pain. Do you get the pain all the time, and does anything make it feel worse or better?â
âItâs only there some of the time. Itâs worse when Iâm going upstairs or getting dressed or turning over in bed,â Mrs Ellis explained.
Given where the pain was and the description, Theo knew exactly what the problem was. But rather than muscling in, he waited for Madison, who smiled at Mrs Ellis and squeezed her hand. âThe babyâs in absolutely no danger. What youâve got is something called symphysis pubis dysfunctionâSPD for short. It sounds a lot scarier than it is, and an awful lot of women get it. At eighteen weeks, youâre practically halfway through pregnancy, and thatâs the most common time to start noticing the pain.â
She sat down next to the bed, drew a notebook and pen from her pocket, and sketched a swift diagram to show their patient. Theo liked the way she was managing this: focusing on the patientâs worries, making it easy for her to understand. That kind of empathy would make her a brilliant consultant, as Iris had said. And on a personal levelâ¦
No. No involvements. Heâd made his decision years ago: he wasnât going to settle down, get married and have children. Sure, he datedâhe was only humanâbut he always made sure his dates knew he wasnât able to offer anything long term. If that meant people thought he was a shallow playboy, then fineâhe could live with that. As far as he was concerned, other people didnât have to know the real reason behind his decision. He wasnât prepared to put the woman he loved through childbirth, knowing first-hand what could happen when everything went wrong. And no way was he going to go through what his father had gone through.
He forced himself to concentrate on what Madison was saying, just in case she decided to throw a question or two his way.
âBasically your pelvis is in two parts and itâs held together by a joint called the symphysis pubis, which is strengthened by lots of ligaments. When youâre pregnant, your body produces a hormone called relaxin, which softens your ligaments to make it easier for you at birthâbut that also means your pelvis can move during pregnancy, and the movements are what cause the pain.â
âCan you make it stop?â Mrs Ellis asked.
âIâm going to give you a support belt, which will help, and you can take paracetamol to help with the painâthatâs perfectly safe for the baby. Iâm also going to refer you to a physiotherapist, who can teach you some exercises for your tummy and pelvic floor that wonât hurt the baby but will help ease the pain. I canât promise youâll get an appointment with the physio today,â Madison warned, âbut if I can do it, I will.â
âThank you.â Mrs Ellis wiped away the tears that had started to spill over. âI was so scared I was going to lose the baby.â
âItâs always the first thing that goes through your mind,â Madison sympathised, âbut youâre going to be absolutely fine. Even better news is that there are a few things you can do to help make the pain go away.â
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