Military helps worn-out nurses, sicker patients in California COVID-19
effort
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[August 04, 2020]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - All day
long, as Air Force nurse Major Pinky Brewton cares for patients
struggling to breathe in California's COVID-19 ravaged San Joaquin
Valley, fears for her family simmer underneath her cool exterior.
Once back in her Stockton hotel room, seeing her seven-year-old on
Facetime, the relief is overwhelming.
"He's breathing!" Brewton said. "That's the first thing I see as a
nurse. How well is my son breathing?"
Over the past two weeks, the U.S. Department of Defense has sent nearly
200 medics and logistics experts to the Valley. The military has also
sent nearly 600 personnel to Texas, where a surge in COVID-19 cases is
crushing hospitals along the Rio Grande Valley and elsewhere in the
state.
The teams of nurses, doctors and technicians work extra shifts, treating
sicker-than-usual hospital patients. Many are so weak from oxygen
deprivation they can barely eat.
In the San Joaquin Valley agricultural region, intensive care units
overflowed as cases surged earlier this summer. In some counties, as
many as 28% of test results were positive.
At Dameron hospital in Stockton near the state capital of Sacramento,
every nurse was soon deployed on a new COVID-19 floor, said Jennifer
Markovich, the facility's chief nursing officer.
"There wasn't a slow rampup. In the space of two weeks we just saw a
significant increase in patients ... and really started to see those
staffing needs really escalate."
CHAPLAINS, MENTAL HEALTH EXPERTS
When staffing agencies lacked healthcare workers, the hospital turned to
the state, Markovich said. Under the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, Brewton's team of 20 military nurses and respiratory therapists
came on board in mid-July.
About 160 Air Force medical staff have been sent to California so far,
with about 100 in San Joaquin Valley, coordinated by 25 U.S. Army
logistics experts trained in responding to nuclear, chemical and
biological attacks.
Chaplains and mental health experts were added to relieve stress in a
system stretched to its limits.
The teams, mostly stationed at Travis Air Force Base north of San
Francisco, were easily absorbed into the rotations and work cultures of
the Valley hospitals, said Lieutenant Colonel Ryan Gassman, who commands
the California teams.
"It's not like we have any Air Force tents that are set up outside,"
Gassman said. "We are truly jumping into the staff in each of these
hospitals to help support in any way, shape or form that we can."
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U.S. Air Force Major Pinky Brewton discusses hospital procedures
with Air Force Colonel Justin Nast, the commander of COVID Theater
Hospital, at Dameron Hospital in Stockton, California, U.S. July 22,
2020. Army National Guard/Staff Sgt. Ryan Sheldon/Handout via
REUTERS.
In addition to five hospitals in the San Joaquin Valley, military
teams have also been deployed to the Los Angeles area and Rancho
Mirage in Riverside County east of Los Angeles.
COVID-19 cases in California began climbing after Memorial Day,
which health officials attributed in part to family gatherings
without masks or physical distancing measures. Statewide, cases have
topped 500,000, and over 9,000 Californians have died.
California, Texas, Florida and Arizona are among several hotspot
U.S. states for a second wave of coronavirus cases.
FRAGILE HOSPITALS
In the San Joaquin Valley, a perfect storm of cultural, political
and economic issues led to a crush of cases in a fragile rural and
smaller-city hospital system.
The region is heavily Latino, a group making up 39% of California's
population but accounts for 56% of COVID-19 infections and 46% of
deaths in the most populous U.S. state. Agricultural businesses that
have not provided protective equipment to workers, or implemented
social distancing or rules requiring masks has led to increased
infections. Large family gatherings and multi-generational
households have led to fast and deadly transmission, often to
vulnerable older relatives.
The Valley, which includes the oil drilling and agricultural area
around Bakersfield, and farmlands around Fresno, is generally more
conservative than the rest of the state, and many local and
congressional leaders have opposed rules requiring masks and social
distancing.
The resulting toll is stark. As of Friday, only 20 intensive care
unit beds were available for new patients in all of San Joaquin
County, which has a population of nearly 800,000.
"The first thing I saw were really, really sick patients," nurse
Brewton said, describing her first day at Dameron. "The acuity of
these patients are far more than what we see on a typical medical
floor."
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; editing by Bill Tarrant and Richard
Chang)
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