Every Wednesday for 20 years my apartment
was cleaned by a man named Giuseppe Sonnino, commonly known as Peppino The Jew.
He was a world-class professional who spoke Roman dialect so dense that my native
informant friend Mariateresa regularly missed words. The Nazis had failed to
find his hiding place in a Gentile neighbor’s apartment when they swept through
Rome in 1943. His brother did get picked up, and survived Auschwitz, but never talked
sense again.
Wherever he worked Peppino would
shuffle around in felt slippers, so his every step would buff the floor. For
our parties, whose guests were the grubbiest of 1960s types, he insisted on answering
the door and passing around drinks in a white jacket with gold-colored buttons.
His pride was so fierce that when once he saw that a client had left two
treasury bills in plain view on a table with a strand of hair in between, thinking
to test the help’s honesty, he quit on the spot. Toward the end of his life, he
cleaned better with galloping Alzheimer’s disease than anybody else could with
intact mentation.
Peppino had great faith in my powers.
I remember how one day in the ‘80s he set a friend's laboratory report in front
of me and asked me for an interpretation. At first I shook my head at this
absurd request, but he was so crestfallen I agreed to take a look.
What he’d handed me was a flimsy pink
National Health Service form with blurred numbers scrawled next to enigmatic
abbreviations. I deciphered the first ones as hematocrit 35%, red blood cells
4,000,000, white blood cells 9000, eosinophils 10%… "She's a little
anemic, but probably not by losing blood, maybe she's been ill recently, though
judging by her white blood count I’d say she doesn’t have an infection at the
moment. It does look like she may have hayfever…" Transaminases SGOT 7,
SGPT 9, gamma-GT 60. I was warming up: "She should probably cut down a bit
on the wine, it’s affecting her liver, but there's no serious damage."
Fasting blood sugar 98, BUN 15, creatinine 0.9, urine red cells 0, white cells
2-3: "No diabetes, her kidneys work fine, no signs of urine infection."
The exercise sat somewhere between Sherlock Holmes and Tarot cards. Sodium 138,
potassium 3.4. "Does she have high blood pressure? Yes, that’s what I
figured. Do you know if she's taking a water pill? Yes? Well it’s driving her
potassium down a bit, she needs to eat more fruit." Sedimentation rate 25
"…She's in her 50s, like you? Then this is normal for her age, if she were
younger it would be a sign of inflammation…"
It astounded me to see how much
information was stashed in those numbers.
Another time Peppino brought me his
own EKG. When I interpreted it over my kitchen table his mouth fell open – for
him the needle’s tracing was an oracular mystery that could only be read by the
cardiologist who had actually strapped on the electrodes.
Sometimes I miss those days when
doctoring in Italy was half sorcery, and physicians competed with the hordes of
operators telling fortunes on live TV. And I also miss Peppino.
A version of this post is being
published simultaneously in my column in The American In Italia, Bedside
Manners.
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very nice...pleased to be a "follower"
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