New Orleans doctors scramble as coronavirus deaths, cases soar
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[March 30, 2020]
By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) - Emergency room doctor Thomas
Krajewski stopped at the hospital room door at 2 a.m. to glance at the
chart. He knew instantly the long odds faced by the patient inside: A
man in his 70s, with a fever, short of breath.
“Do you mind calling my son?” the patient asked him. “My two grandsons
tomorrow morning are going to crawl in my bed because they wake me up on
the weekends, and if I’m not there, they will wonder.”
Twelve hours later, the man needed a ventilator. After a day, his
kidneys started to fail. In three days, he was dead - one of 151 people
who had succumbed to COVID-19 in Louisiana by late Sunday. The state has
confirmed 3,540 cases since March 9 - among the world’s fastest-growing
infection rates. That pace, Governor John Bel Edwards has said, signals
that the state could become the next Italy, with overwhelmed hospitals
forced to turn patients away.
Frontline health workers scrambled to prepare for that grim prophecy as
patients started to stream through their doors last week. The governor
said on Face the Nation Sunday that the state has only a tiny fraction
of the about 13,000 ventilators it will need, and that it has yet to
receive federal approval to tap a national stockpile. In New Orleans,
the state’s epicenter, authorities are setting up a field hospital to
handle the expected overflow of patients at the Ernest N. Morial
Convention Center - the same site where thousands of Hurricane Katrina
refugees suffered in 2005.
Then as now, many doctors fear they won’t get enough supplies and
support to keep up with the deluge of victims. This time they are
fighting a pathogen that threatens them - and their families - every
time they extend a hand to help a patient.
Krajewski, a 31-year-old Cincinnati native who is just two years out of
residency, works the overnight shift at St. Bernard Parish Hospital, in
a working class suburb just east of the city. After work, Krajewski
comes home to his newborn son, Cal, just three weeks old, and his wife
Genevieve. He strips off his clothes on the porch before entering his
house. He drops his glasses and phone into a small UV light sterilizer
and heads straight to the shower.
"I come home – and I'm horrified," Krajewski said. "I'm wearing an N95
respirator-level face mask anytime I'm near my child, and that is after
I've fully decontaminated.”
Doctors across New Orleans are calling colleagues in New York and
Seattle, sharing intelligence on the virus. They trade suggestions on
how to hook two patients up to a single respirator. Some health workers
are renting out apartments to quarantine themselves from their families,
said Joseph Kanter, an emergency room physician and lead public health
official for the New Orleans area.
“They’re using all these stop-gap measures” to protect themselves, said
Kanter, calling it a “damning indictment” of the nation’s lack of
preparedness for such a pandemic.
‘IT CAN HAPPEN TO ME’
With more than 141,000 infected and nearly 2,500 dead in the United
States, health workers in hard-hit places like New Orleans are feeling
the strain of taking in hundreds of contagious patients who often
deteriorate quickly.
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Emergency medicine physician Thomas Krajewski poses for a photo
after finishing his shift amid an outbreak of coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., March 27, 2020. Picture
taken March 27, 2020. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn
While older patients are by far the most at-risk, some Louisiana
doctors say they have been shocked at the severity of some cases in
which younger people have just one underlying condition, such as
hypertension or diabetes. Some patients in their 30s or 40s have
been quickly put on life support, said Jeff Elder, an emergency
physician at University Medical Center in downtown New Orleans.
Such cases are worrisome because doctors are still struggling to
understand why certain younger patients are hit so much harder than
others - and because they make younger caregivers fear for their own
safety.
“You treat them and think, ‘If it is happening to him, it can happen
to me,’” said Elder, who is 40.
EXPONENTIAL RISE
Louisiana’s soaring infection rates mean some hospitals will have to
start turning away patients in the next week unless statewide
efforts to curtail social contact start to show an impact, Governor
Edwards has said. The governor’s pleas for residents to stay home in
daily news conferences have become increasingly laced with anger and
frustration.
“It's not that hard to understand!” Edwards said on Friday, talking
about what awaits New Orleans. “The trajectory we're on right now
takes us to a place where we cannot meet the demands on our health
care system.”
Even as fears rise inside overtaxed hospitals, caregivers are
working in an unsettling silence. Many have bans or severe
limitations on visiting family members, who normally fill their
hallways with conversation, comforting loved ones and waiting on
scraps of news.
Patients with COVID-19 suffer quietly, too. In survival mode, they
focus almost solely on breathing. Fevers make them sweat through
their hospital gowns as they sit upright in bed, the position that
makes it easiest to breathe. Ventilators hum in the background.
Krajewski decided early in college to become a doctor, in part
because of a self-described hero complex. In his young career, he
has thrived on seeing patients get well in response to his
treatments.
That’s all changed in the last few days. He has put about a dozen
patients on life support, and only one has come off. Five have died.
“There is a sense of gravity when you know you are one of the last
people that will talk to somebody,” Krajewski said. “Those
conversations are happening more often.”
(Reporting by Brad Brooks; Editing by Brian Thevenot)
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