CHAPTER ONE
The Woman Who Needed a Zipper
Laurenās back again.ā The gastroenterology fellow groaned. āLightbulbs this time.ā I was in my second year of medical residency training and had just started working in a major medical hospital as a psychiatric consultant for medical and surgical inpatients. I had no idea who the fellow was talking about. When I told him so, he began to laugh. āOh, my God. Youāve never seen Lauren? Every time she comes in, the ER docs call us and we call you guys. We all give our advice on how to treat her, but you know what she really needs?ā I didnāt. āA zipper,ā he said. āSee you in the ER.ā
I was utterly confused. Lightbulbs? A zipper? Sounded more like supplies for a childās science project than relevant clinical information. My mind was spinning as I walked through the dingy hospital stairwell to the emergency room to meet Lauren. On the wall at the landing hung a faded hospital-benefit poster of a horse-drawn carriage in the snow and some lines from Robert Frost. When I walked by the poster, I was typically working an overnight shift, and so āmiles to go before I sleepā had taken on a bleary, fluorescent-lit meaning quite detached from woods, ālovely, dark and deepā. As I swiped my badge to go into the ER, the lines were still running through my head: Between the woods and frozen lake / The darkest evening of the year.
Lauren was in a room across from the nursesā station. The ER rooms had three walls; the āfourth wallā was a pink-and-tan curtain that could be drawn for privacy or pulled back to enter or exit. Laurenās curtain was wide open, and a security guard in a navy uniform sat in a plastic chair at the foot of her bed. I took a look in as I walked by. Given the gastroenterology fellowās dramatic reaction to her presence, I expected her appearance to be notable. It wasnāt. She was sitting glumly on the bed, upright, in a hospital johnny. She was thin. Her dirty blond hair was a little mussed. She was twenty-five, but she looked slightly older. Otherwise, there was not much about her that was remarkable. I continued walking by; I wanted to take a look at her chart before I went in.
As I pulled Laurenās chart from the nursesā station, one of the nurses seated there glanced at my name tag. CHRISTINE MONTROSS, M.D., it read. PSYCHIATRY.
āAha!ā The nurse smiled and in a singsong voice added, āI know who youāre here to see.ā
āThe woman in 2B?ā I asked. āYou know her?ā
The nurse nodded and laughed, surprised. āYou donāt? I thought everybody knew Lauren. Have fun!ā She winked and handed me a folder with the patientās ER paperwork in it. āOh, Doc?ā she called as I walked away. āDonāt lend her that nice pen of yours.ā
I opened the chart. A sheet of Laurenās orders was on top. Along with the ticked boxes indicating the conventional laboratory studies for ER patients were a few additional specifications: āFinger food diet onlyā, read one line. Beneath it: āNO objects to be left in room ā SEE BEHAVIORAL CARE PLAN.ā I couldnāt be sure how to interpret these orders, but from them I surmised that Lauren must be either suicidal or homicidal. Patients who were relegated to finger-food diets were those who could not be trusted with utensils.
Beneath the orders page was a sheet of Laurenās lab values. I quickly scanned it, looking for the typical irregularities of psychiatric patients: elevated blood-alcohol levels, a positive drug test, subtherapeutic medication levels, thyroid abnormalities, infection. With the exception of a toxicology screen that was positive for her having smoked marijuana sometime recently, nothing stood out. Her complete blood count and electrolytes were totally normal. Her pregnancy test was negative. Chest and abdominal X-rays had been taken; the results were pending.
I flipped through the remainder of the paperwork and found that Lauren was already slated for admission to a bed on the internal-medicine service. The admitting house officer had seen her and written a note. I deciphered the scrawled shorthand to read: āThis patient is a well-known 25-year-old female with extensive psych history and multiple previous intentional ingestions.ā Usually an āintentional ingestionā meant that someone had drunk bleach or eaten rat poison or overdosed on pills as a suicide attempt, but the meaning was different here. Lightbulbs. Suddenly keeping utensils and objects and nice pens out of Laurenās reach made sense. Nobody wanted her to swallow them.
I walked past the security guard and into Laurenās room. Before I could introduce myself, she glared at me and said, āLet me guess, youāre the shrink, right? I can always tell you guys ā youāre all nicey-nice handshakes and dipshit smiles.ā The security guard, who had doubtless seen a number of ER psych consults, stifled a chuckle and put his fist over his mouth to hide a grin.
āSounds like youāve pegged us,ā I answered, reaching out my right hand in a nicey-nice shake. āIām Dr Montross.ā
āYeah,ā replied Lauren, glowering at my hand without taking it. āI can read your fuckinā name tag, Christine, but unless you are going to get me something for this pain, Iām not in the mood for a conversation.ā
I turned to the security guard. āWould you mind letting us talk alone for a minute?ā I asked.
āWhatever you say, Doc.ā He shrugged. āIāll be right outside if you need me.ā He stepped out and drew the curtain closed behind him when he left. I slid his chair to the side of Laurenās bed and sat down.
Lauren pulled the hospital blanket up to her neck, lay down against her pillow, and rolled onto her side, turning her back to me. āJesus, you people donāt listen. I wasnāt kidding. Unless you give me something for my pain, Iām not talking.ā
āSince Iām meeting you for the first time, itās hard for me to know about your pain. If you tell me about it, maybe we can come up with a way I could be of help,ā I offered. It was a stretch ā she was talking physical pain, and I was going to try to access her psychic pain ā but it didnāt feel like a lie. I knew I wasnāt going to write her an order for pain medication ā that was the territory of the ER and the medicine teams ā but I needed an entrĆ©e, and I hoped that asking about her pain would soften her defensive stance. Or at least encourage her to roll over and look at me. āWhatās going on that youāve ended up in the emergency room?ā
āRead. The. Chart,ā Lauren intoned, not making a move.
āIāve looked at it a bit already,ā I said, ābut Iād actually rather hear from you ā ā
āWell, Iād rather be left alone,ā she interrupted.
āFair enough,ā I said. āLet me just read you what Iāve got here, and you tell me whether that sounds about right, okay?ā I opened the chart to the admission note. Lauren was silent. āIt says here that you were feeling upset and that you swallowed some pieces of a lightbulb. Is that right?ā
Lauren scoffed, then abruptly turned toward me, angry. āYeah, āupsetā. Thatās one way to put it. See? Thatās why I donāt talk to you people. Iām in the hospital three days ago, you all decide ā you shrinks and the surgeons and the gastrointestinal docs ā you all decide to kick me out even though Iām telling everybody Iām not ready to go home, and then some intern writes that Iām āupsetā. Well, fuck yeah, Iām upset. Iām upset because I told you I wasnāt ready to go home and no one listened to me. So pardon me if I donāt really buy that youāre so interested in my side of things.ā
āWhat happened with the lightbulb?ā I asked.
āLightbulbs,ā she said.
āOkay, what happened with the lightbulbs?ā
āI was pissed off. I crushed them up and swallowed them,ā she said matter-of-factly. āNot the metal part, just the glass and wire.ā I nodded. There was a moment of quiet between us. Then she spoke. āNow do you believe me that my stomach fucking hurts?ā
I left Lauren and went off to write up my evaluation and recommendations. The surgical team to which she would be assigned consulted the psychiatry service for help in managing her psychiatric medications while she was hospitalized. The teamās larger hope, of course, was that we would be able to provide some sort of intervention that would break the pattern of Laurenās swallowing, or at least lengthen the periods of time in between her intentional ingestions. To better understand the medications she had been on and the psychiatric treatments she had tried prior to this admission, I pulled her old charts from medical records. She had stacks of them, some of which were more than four years old and so had been archived. I looked up the most recent admissions that had taken place in the last four years; there were twenty-three. Her hospitalizations had been prompted by her ingestion of the following:
ninety screws
AA batteries and paper clips
two knife blades and four fork handles
four candles
four metal spoon handles
the screwdriver from an eyeglass-repair kit
a knife and six barbecue skewers
a bedspring
thirteen pencils
a knife, a knife handle, and a mercury thermometer
a box of three-inch galvanized nails
a screwdriver, a ninja knife, and a knife blade
a steak knife
a razor and five pens
two knives
scissors, pins, and a nail file
four four-inch pieces of curtain rod
scissors, a drill bit, and a pen
a six-inch piece of curtain rod and a seven-inch knife
a knife, three spoons, and some copper wire
two six-inch steak knives
a pair of scissors
a four-inch metal blade, three spoon handles, and a nail clipper
Over and over, Lauren would swallow potentially dangerous objects in the context of stress. She swallowed the screwdriver, the knife blade, and the ninja knife when she learned that her uncle was terminally ill. The two knife blades and four fork handles were a response to learning that her sister had hepatitis. The box of nails was after a fight with a neighbor. Each time she said she felt better after she had swallowed something and then brought herself to the emergency room for treatment. Over and over, doctors performed endoscopies, threading a camera and tools down Laurenās throat with a tube to try to get the objects out before the things she had swallowed inflicted damage on her esophagus, stomach, or intestines. Only once, after sheād ingested a single spoon handle, was endoscopy deemed unnecessary. āShe had some discomfortā, the discharge summary read, ābut the spoon passed normally.ā
In contrast, once, when an eight-inch knife blade was too dangerous to pull back up through her esophagus and out of her mouth, Laurenās abdomen had to be surgically opened and the knife removed. Many times, multiple endoscopic attempts were required to āretrieveā the same object. One endoscopy note read, āFour approximately 4-inch-long sharp pieces of broken curtain rail were found in the gastric fundus. Removal of two was accomplished with a snare. The other two could not be removed. They kept holding up at the gastroesophageal junction despite two hoursā manipulation.ā If objects could not be extracted, more experienced doctors were brought in for additional attempts. A senior physician developed a reputation for being able to retrieve items Lauren had swallowed when others had failed to do so. Once, during a hospital meeting that had specifically been convened to discuss Laurenās care, an administrator asked the gathered group of clinicians for ideas about a systematic approach for treating her during her recurrent admissions. A GI fellow piped up from the back, āIf at first you donāt succeed, try, try again. If you still donāt succeed, call in Dr Friedrichs.ā
Not infrequently, once awake and recovering back on the floor, Lauren would swallow something in her hospital room and require further treatment. Several times she swallowed the handles of spoons from her meal trays. Once a pencil. Once she broke fragments of wood from the frame of her roomās window and ate them. One night in the emergency room, she removed and swallowed a metal piece of the gurney.
The doctors charged with Laurenās care had no choice but to treat her when she came to the emergency room. Each time her actions were potentially life-threatening. To deny her care not only would be ethically incomprehensible but could also be medically catastrophic. No one could suggest that doctors should refuse to perform procedures on her, even if the procedures themselves were somehow reinforcing the maladaptive behavior, even if Lauren might swallow something as soon as she awakened from an endoscopy that had narrowly averted disaster. And yet the frustration of the surgical staff, who once during a consultation expressed their shared wish to ālet her experience the consequencesā, was only partially an emotional response to her flagrant self-injury and misuse of their expertise. It was also a manifestation of the fact that they felt they were contributing to this young womanās demise. āIt doesnāt matter that sheās the one that swallowed the razor,ā one surgical house officer said to me. āIf I have to operate, Iām the one thatās cutting her open, exposing her to the dangers of major surgery, giving her a belly full of scar tissue. . . . I might fix the emergency, but beyond that, none of what Iām doing is going to help her in the long run.ā
Many surgeons differentiate their field of medicine from others by their ability to perform a procedure that fixes whatās wrong with the patient. Surgeons realign the broken hip and remove the cancerous breast; they repair gunshot wounds and replace burned skin. One particularly brazen surgeon with whom I trained as a medical student would routinely wait for his patients to awaken from anesthesia and then come to the bedside, look them in the eye, and announce, āI cured you!ā This was all the more disquieting to observe given that some of his patients were terminally ill, and his role ā to remove a cancer-ridden lobe of the liver or extricate a tumor-infested loop of bowel ā might well have been only palliative in nature.
In general, the surgeons with whom I work have a great respect and appreciation for the field of psychiatry, but they also feel theyād be particularly ill suited to practice it. Lauren was an unsettling patient for all of us, but psychiatrists often face complex patients and ambiguous diagnoses. Laurenās condition was particularly irritating for the surgeons who treated her. The chronic, āunfixableā nature of her illness was made plain in her personalized Medical and Behavioral Treatment Plan, the first line of which read, āApproach for this patient should focus on disease management, not cure.ā
By continuing to ingest objects in the hospital, Lauren was not only putting herself at risk but also putting her doctors and the hospital at risk. A hospitalās job, by definition, is to keep patients safe and healthy. In the treatment of psychiatric patients, this means that reasonable measures must be taken to prevent potentially dangerous patients from having a way to hurt or kill themselves or others. For these very reasons, many psychiatric hospitals have specialty fixtures. Door handles and showerheads flip down when weight is put on them to prevent patients from hanging themselves. Beds and couches are often built into the walls to prevent them from being upended or used to blockade doors. Patients on āsuicide precautionsā...