As signs indicate the curve of new cases may be starting to flatten,
doctors in the United States shared with Reuters what they wish they
had known before the coronavirus outbreak began.
Dr. Anju Goel, an internal medicine specialist in California, said
that had practitioners understood how severely the respiratory
disease COVID-19 would affect the elderly, more could have been done
to protect them from exposure and get them early treatment.
Across the country in New York, the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak,
Mount Sinai Hospital Emergency Department Director Dr. Jolion
McGreevy said doctors had learned that some patients benefited from
not being immediately intubated, even if their oxygen levels were
low.
Others responded well to changing their position every half an hour,
he said.
"The sickest of the sick still need to be intubated and that's just
the way it is. But there's a larger in-term group that we really
didn't understand."
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Flipping patients onto their front allowed the lungs "to open and expand and
give better oxygenation," agreed Dr. Jennifer Haythe, an internist and critical
care cardiologist at Columbia University Medical Center. But she said she
believed that ventilators were essential.
"If you want to give them a shot at survival, you put a breathing tube in."
If hospitals had had better warning, they could have been better prepared with
the necessary protective equipment, she added.
"We all wished, for the sake of people, that we had recognized that this was
coming earlier ... probably could have prevented a lot of the mass amounts of
people that came in all at once."
(Writing by Rosalba O'Brien; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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