Patients are often suicidally reluctant to wake a
doctor, but I don’t object. Traffic is light, parking is easy, and since I have
no office, I can sleep late. I’ve made a thousand housecalls that got me out of
bed.
Callers awaken in the dark, certain something terrible
is about to happen. I try to handle anxiety attacks over the phone using
sympathy and calm reassurance. I never point out that nothing terrible will
happen because guests know that; it’s why they’re upset. I explain that no one
is perfect; sometimes our brains go haywire, but it never lasts long. If I keep
the guest on the line, this almost always works. Making a housecall is risky
because guests often feel better and cancel before I arrive or feel worse and
insist that the hotel call paramedics.
Some hotel doctors use paramedics as a substitute for
getting out of bed, but I reserve them for emergencies. Mostly, these are
obvious. Heart attacks can rouse victims from sleep, but they are not subtle.
Niggling chest discomfort doesn’t qualify, and chest pain in a young person is
probably something else.
I see a cross-section of ailments, but guests with an
upset stomach seem overrepresented. I consider a wee-hour visit for vomiting a
good call (i.e. not life-threatening; I can help; patients are especially
grateful). The latest antivomiting drug, ondansetron, is superior to the old
standby, Compazine. It was once wildly expensive and used only for vomiting after
cancer chemotherapy, but its patent expired a few years ago, and the price has
plummeted.
Most upset stomachs don’t last long. I assure guests
they’ll probably feel better when the sun rises, and (a perk of being a doctor)
when that happens, guests believe I’ve cured them.