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Audio CD
First published September 4, 2018
"No knowledge is ever wasted."
"When faced with difficult decisions in the future, I would tally up my intellect and emotions and allow my heart equal influence with my head before deciding how to act. I learned that more than likely, whichever way my heart leaned is probably the way I should proceed."
Our first impression was that Nome was a shantytown; a settlement of tiny houses built of plywood and corrugated metal, lined up door to door on streets made of matted down dirt and gravel. There was no landscaping around the houses because there were no yards to accommodate landscaping. There were no services such as water or sewers, streetlights, telephones, curbs, or sidewalks, and nothing to give the town personality. Everything was build from a functional standpoint to get through the brutal harshness of winter. Survival was the only concern; aesthetics mattered little. (70)But in other ways, it sounds like there were some similarities. Sims was the sole doctor on hand in Nome (on call 24/7, in addition to his daily working hours) and was also responsible for care in the outlying villages, many of which comprised little more than a cluster of shanties. Take this observation when he was called out for a tricky birth:
I made a mental inventory of what I had and what I didn’t.
Obviously, there was plenty I needed: anesthesia; scalpels; suture material; an umbilical cord clip; sterile surgical instruments; forceps, needles and syringes; dressings; IV fluids; medications to stop bleeding; oxygen; isolette for the newborn; diapers. All the normal things a hospital supplies for mothers about to have a child.
What I had was: two pairs of sterile gloves; Betadine soap; a bundle of Band-Aids held together by a rubber band; a couple of syringes, but no helpful medicines to use with them; scissors that were not sterilized; and my stethoscope. It was an “up shit creek without a paddle” scenario and I knew it. (194)This is the sort of medicine that requires constant outside-the-box thinking: a little bit of everything and whole lot of sink-or-swim.