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Tuesday, March 23
by
Reynolds
on Tue 23 Mar 2004 11:52 PM GMT
Can someone explain why this seems like a good idea? Do you wonder if this might be why they are having trouble winning the "Hearts and minds" of the Iraqi people?
by
Reynolds
on Tue 23 Mar 2004 08:07 PM GMT
Joey (Accordian Guy) found this cool looking film, and like him, I want to have it subtitled now
by
Reynolds
on Tue 23 Mar 2004 07:25 PM GMT
First off, thanks to everyone who has contacted me over my "exposure", I appreciate it all - even if I haven't personally replied to you (you'll find out why I might not have answered you a bit later in this post...)
I went to Occupational Health on Monday, basically to let them know about my exposure, and that I was on PEP. (If you want to learn more about PEP, click Here). The LAS showed how nice they are by lending me a spare ambulance to drive to my appointment - GPS navigation comes in handy when you don't know where you are going... Occupational Health is South of the river at Kings College Hospital - which is a bit of a trek. "Occy Health" took baseline blood samples, so that would know if there was any effect on my liver/kidneys/white cell count, as well as filling in a couple of forms about my exposure. Then they told me that they would get in contact with the "Donor" to see what his virus load and Hepatitis status was. Until now I always thought of "Donor" as a "nice" word - heart donors and the like - I never really thought it would happen to include this circumstance. During the consultation they told me that I'd need blood tests every fortnight for the next month or so, and that my first HIV/Hepatitis status check would be in three months, with an additional one in six months. Should they both be negative then I would be in the clear. They also told me of the side effects of the retrovirals that I am taking - and seemed surprised that all I was experiencing was similar to a mild hangover... That was yesterday - today was spent vomiting/sleeping to avoid nausea/and experiencing the joys of explosive diarrhoea. My station officer called up and asked me how I was - when I told him, he basically told me to take it easy and go back to work when I felt better. However there was some good news when the occupational health nurse contacted me, and told me that the donor's viral load was low, that there were no resistances to the PEP drugs I'm taking and that in 2002 he was free of Hepatitis. So that has eased my mind somewhat. Some people have commented that I'm taking it rather well, there are a number of reasons for this - not least that the chances of me becoming HIV+ are less than 1 in 5,000. The other thing is that I can't do anything now to change those odds, apart from continue to take the PEP. The other side effect of the meds I'm taking are that I'm having a certain "vagueness" - my mind isn't operating on all three cylinders, so if this seems disjointed, I've got an excuse... |
Welcome to Random Acts Of Reality, a Blog based in London, England, written by an E.M.T working for the London Ambulance Service. Also, number one search result for "Womble porn". All names have be changed to protect the guilty. This Blog was previously known as "Why I Hate Humanity" but the antipsychotic medication seems to have kicked in.
All opinions on this website are mine alone, and may not reflect those of the L.A.S or other ambulance crews Find out more about me here.
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