Unputdownable: Read an Extract from The Registrar by Neela Janakiramanan

Unputdownable: Read an Extract from The Registrar by Neela Janakiramanan

The child’s hand is grey and mottled. I’ve crouched down next to the bed to examine it and now I stand up, the urgency of Ngoni’s phone call clear. We went to medical school together and he’s not often rattled, certainly not by a simple trampoline accident.

He’s correct, the right forearm definitely has no pulse. The boy is nine but looks younger, and is much too small for the adult-sized hospital bed crammed into a cubicle painted blue with fish stickers over the wall. He’s slumped down, his T-shirt riding up at the back and exposing his belly.

The paramedics have strapped up his right arm, and in his other hand, he clutches a small green inhaler that whistles slightly as he takes ragged breaths. His eyes are glazed from the painkillers he’s breathing in. His mother hovers, too agitated to sit.

‘We took him straight to X-ray,’ Ngoni says as he pushes a computer on a trolley into the room. He points at the screen, confirming the severity of the fracture.

Shit.‘What’s going on?’ the mother asks, her voice shaky, the tearstains on her cheek matching those of her child. She’s lookingat Ngoni. He waits for me to explain.‘He’s broken his arm just above the elbow and the fracture’s putting pressure on an artery. But don’t worry,’ I reassure her, ‘as soon as the bone’s straight again, the blood flow will return to normal.’

I have one eye on the clock above the bed. ‘What time did it happen?’I don’t tell her that muscle cells deprived of blood start to die within a
couple of hours. I don’t tell her that if it takes too long to restore blood flow then the muscles can swell within their tight fibrous coverings and die even hours or days later. In years past, kids with this fracture developed clawed fingers and permanent disability—and the best way of avoiding this is to straighten the bone and unkink the artery as soon as possible. I don’t want to tell her that this is a time-critical emergency until I have a plan.

‘I think . . .’ The mother can’t remember how long it’s been. She didn’t check the time when her son cried out. She didn’t look at her watch as she pulled him out of the narrow gap in the trampoline netting and called an ambulance…

Continue reading the extract here…

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6 July 2022

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      10 May 2022

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        Publisher details

        The Registrar
        Author
        Neela Janakiramanan
        Publisher
        Allen & Unwin
        Genre
        Fiction
        Released
        05 July, 2022
        ISBN
        9781761066511

        Synopsis

        Dedicated and ambitious, Emma Swann is about to start a gruelling year as a surgical registrar at the prestigious Mount teaching hospital. She's excited to join her adored older brother Andy in pursuing the same career as their father, an eminent surgeon who made his name at The Mount.

        But the pressure of living up to his distinguished reputation is nothing compared with the escalating stress Emma experiences as a registrar. It's an arduous, unremitting slog of twenty-hour days, punishing schedules, life and death decisions - and very little assistance, instruction or support from her superiors, who waste no time pointing out just how superior they are. Amidst a background culture of humiliation and bullying, being a woman just makes things worse: misogyny is rife and Emma is subjected to other, more insidious, kinds of male attention.

        As Emma battles overwork, exhaustion and increasing disillusion, she has less and less ability and time to care for her patients' welfare, and that of herself and those she loves. Is it possible for her to be the doctor, wife, sister and friend she aspires to be in such a broken hospital system? Can she salvage her own life while she's trying to save others? And how can she and her colleagues endure such impossible conditions without making fatal mistakes?

        With the frenetic pace of a psychological thriller, The Registrar offers a rare insight into the world of a surgeon-in-the-making from one who has survived it. Told with compassion, skill and emotional heart, this gripping and moving novel goes behind the headlines to reveal the human experience of being both doctor and patient in a medical system at breaking point.

        Neela Janakiramanan
        About the author

        Neela Janakiramanan

        Neela Janakiramanan is a?reconstructive plastic surgeon with particular expertise in complex hand and wrist surgery. She has wide experience working in the public and private health sector. She is a seasoned public speaker and advocate on issues including health equity, gender equity, and diversity and inclusion. She was also one of the medical leads in the Kids off Nauru campaign and in bringing together the Australian medical community and operationalising the Australian Medevac legislation to facilitate medical care for refugees in offshore detention. Neela is a regular contributor to?Women's Agenda, and has also written for The AgeSydney Morning HeraldThe Saturday Paper, and often appears on ABC's The Drum.

        Books by Neela Janakiramanan

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