Well done
@Chuck C, by the sounds of it you will be home in no time!
Attended to by the best has got to be reassuring.
You are in a shared ward now?
I believe this ward is all cardiac. By shared ward do you mean sharing a room? I have my own room. Better than I expected. I have a couch, my own bathroom with shower and a recliner. I have found that I prefer to sleep in the recliner. It is much less painful when I need to get up for anything- sitting up and standing is easy and pretty much painless. The bed, however, is somewhat painful to get in and out of, even using the exact technique that they teach you and I always worry that I am disturbing the wound and delaying healing.
I've taken a shower each day in this ward- so nice to be able to shower. They will assist you showering if you need it, but my wife is here, so she helped me.
Have to comment about the bathroom situation. There is no privacy in ICU. You have 1 liter pee container and a commode and sometimes they are in the room when you need to use them. They generally give you some privacy usually when you go #2, but usually not when you go #1, just depends on the nurse. I accepted the offer of a sponge bath each time- again, you just have to swallow any issues you have with privacy. They use a special antibacterial and antifungal solution, which they let air dry on you. It has been proven effective at reducing infections, but personally I found it irritated my skin some- especially the boys. They hurt so bad I had to have the nurse apply some lotion and again, forget about privacy.
I am very sleep deprived, but have been catching up a little since they moved me to this ward. I got maybe 4 hours last night and another 2-3 during the day, after my shower. That was wonderful, getting all relaxed from the hot shower, then being able to take a nap. The three nights before that I had approx 2 hours sleep each 24 hour period, if you can even call it sleep. Not much sleeping happens in ICU, at least for me it didn't. On average I probably had 5-10 alarms going off per hour. It might be an elevated pulse, an irregular heart rhythm, an IV being empty or blocked and sometimes due to loss of connectivity of one of the electrodes. You kind of think that you must be dying because all of these alarms keep going off. Then, you'll get 15 minutes of quiet and start to doze off, just when the x-ray guy comes to take an x-ray of your chest. So, for me anyway, I can't get any real sleep in an environment like that.
Compared to ICU, the new ward is a piece of cake. The nurses are very kind and sweet. Different types are drawn to each unit. ICU, it is sort of like working in the emergency room and they are individuals who can multi-task under a lot of stress and not make mistakes. In the current ward, they are very sweet individuals, who make your life easier. In both wards they are very knowledgeable, although you can a wide spectrum there.
Here is a tip: once they move you to the next ward, have them adjust the room the way that works best for you. For me, that just meant putting the recliner right next to the bed, positioned so that I can see the computer screen with my vitals. And keeping the IV pole in the best spot to allow for easy movement from the recliner to the bathroom. You might be here for a few days, so find the arrangement that makes you happy.
At this point, it really is the easy life. I have freedom of mobility, I am staying ahead of the pain with the meds. I get to order 3 meals per day and it is very good. If I need anything, I just push a button and help usually arrives within minutes. I could get used to this.
That being said, it will be nice to be home and sleeping in my own bed and I can't wait to get released tomorrow. See, you asked a simple question and I gave a great big answer.