On Bay Area’s busiest COVID ward, ‘doom and gloom’ returns but more hope for second wave of patients

in news •  4 years ago 

We are more experienced now,’ say doctors at Regional Hospital in San Jose

image.png

SAN JOSE — In the Emergency Department at East San Jose’s Regional Medical Center, beds spill into the corridors. The waiting room is nearly full and, as the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic surges, so is the COVID ward on the second floor.

In the Intensive Care Unit during Thanksgiving week, patient after patient in glass-walled rooms lay sedated, thick ventilator tubes running down their throats — a grim scene at the Bay Area’s hardest hit hospital. And perhaps nobody better represents the balancing act of heartbreak and hope more than Juan Flores.

site:https://cit.instructure.com/eportfolios/4243/Home/_TONTONSTART_UPSub_Indo_2020FILM__StartUp_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

Earlier this past week, in the last room in the back corner of ICU East, the 68-year-old patient in a bright yellow hospital gown was sitting up and looking through the glass. He had no ventilator, just an oxygen tube connected to his nose. With a surprising grin, he waved.

At that moment, Juan Flores was thankful. By Thanksgiving day, when his oxygen levels plummeted, he too was intubated.

Hospitalizations are surging in the Bay Area, forcing new restrictions and mandatory quarantines on Saturday in a desperate act to keep the infected from overwhelming hospitals.

site:https://cit.instructure.com/eportfolios/4248/Home/_TONTONTale_of_the_Nine_Tailed_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__Tale_of_the_Nine_Tailed_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

But doctors and nurses have learned so much since the first surge of the pandemic hit in the spring that patients are faring better than the ones who ended up here when the pandemic began. Steroids that doctors had been reluctant to use are now proven to work. The antiviral Remdesivir is readily available. And for many patients, less intrusive BiPAP machines and high-flow nasal cannulas are pushing enough air through the nose to open the lungs, keeping them off ventilators and out of the ICU.

site:https://cit.instructure.com/eportfolios/4256/Home/_TONTONChosun_RocoNokdujeon_Sub_Indo_2019FILM__taleofnokdu_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 23: COVID-19 patient Juan Flores, left, speaks to his son Israel on an iPad in the intensive care unit at Regional Medical Center in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
Flores “came in very sick” two weeks ago with heart problems and diabetes.

“Had he come in March or April, he would have been intubated on Day 1,” said Dr. Kashif Hassan, a critical care specialist who is in charge of Flores’ care. “We are more experienced now.”

Last spring, Regional Hospital was ground zero for the pandemic across the Bay Area, peaking at 67 coronavirus patients a day in April. By June, the numbers were down to single digits. Now, though, they’re back up to nearly 60 a day. About 10 new cases arrive each day in the Emergency Department — so many at times that ICU doctors are called in to help.

site:https://cit.instructure.com/eportfolios/4269/Home/_TONTONBORUTO_NARUTO_Episode_176_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__Boruto_Naruto_Next_Generations_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

At the pandemic’s onset, “it was so doom and gloom and crash and burn,” said nurse Liz Thurstone, who works in the second floor COVID ward. During the first wave, she remembers routinely rushing to “three Code Blues before 10 a.m.” to try to resuscitate patients. Now, “there’s an element of fatigue, but we’re in a much better place in treating patients.”

Next
1 of 20
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 23: Registered Nurse Louis Johnson treats a COVID-19 patient in the intensive care unit at Regional Medical Center in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)

CLICK HERE if you’re having a problem viewing the photos on a mobile device.

site:https://cit.instructure.com/eportfolios/4274/Home/_TONTONBORUTO_NARUTO_NEXT_GENERATIONS_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__Boruto_Naruto_Next_Generations_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

Families of COVID patients are still not allowed to visit their relatives. But one afternoon this past week, before Flores was intubated, Dr. Hassan wheeled an iPad on a pole to Flores’ bedside. His 40-year-old son, Israel, was on FaceTime, asking how he was feeling.

“Eight. On a scale of one to 10, eight,” Juan replied in Spanish, saying that after 10 days in the ICU, he was feeling better every day.

What happened to the Flores family is typical of how, especially in the heavily Latinx and Asian community of East San Jose, the virus is spreading. Three generations of Flores’ family live together in a three-bedroom, one-bath house in East San Jose, including Israel and his wife and three children.

site:https://cit.instructure.com/eportfolios/4279/Home/_TONTONONE_PIECE_Episode_952_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__One_Piece_Episode_952_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 23: COVID-19 patient Juan Flores, top, speaks to his son Israel on an iPad in the intensive care unit at Regional Medical Center in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
Israel, who works as a supervisor for a painting contractor and moves among job sites every day, was the first in the family to test positive for coronavirus in mid-October. He holed himself up in his bedroom and his wife, Esther, and mother, Theresa, left meals outside his door. Everyone sanitized the bathroom every time they used it. But within a few days, as his wife and children got sick, Israel sent his parents to a hotel for a week. It was too late. They got sick, too. Juan, long-retired from his assembly line job at an electronics factory, felt the worst. He struggled with a sore throat, fever and body aches.

site:https://dcds.instructure.com/eportfolios/6010/Home/TONTONindo_BORUTO_NARUTO_NEXT_GENERATIONS_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__BORUTO_Episode_176_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

In touch with doctors, Juan tried to recover at home. But after two weeks, his breathing worsened and he became so weak, he doesn’t remember the ambulance taking him to the hospital. His blood glucose level soared.

“Watching the news, I’ve seen what a lot of people go through,” his son, Israel, said. “They go into the hospital and they don’t come out. I didn’t want to lose my parent.”

His second day in the ICU, Juan told his son, “We’ll see what God has for me. If I don’t come out of this, take care of everybody.”

Early in the pandemic, most of the patients coming into Regional and other hospitals were the elderly and frail, often from nursing homes where the crisis was hitting hard. Many ended up adding to the soaring death toll that now exceeds a quarter million people across the country.

Now, though, “I can’t tell you the last time I saw a patient from a nursing home presenting signs of COVID,” a good indication that those patients are better protected now, said Dr. Paul Silka, Regional’s head of the emergency department.

site:https://dcds.instructure.com/eportfolios/6001/Home/TONTONindo_BORUTO_Episode_176_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__BORUTO_NARUTO_NEXT_GENERATIONS_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 23: Ambulances outside of the emergency room at Regional Medical Center in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
Instead, patients coming through his department, either through the filled-up ambulance bay or the waiting room and tents outside, tend to be younger. They are often essential workers in their 20s and 30s with other health issues like diabetes, obesity or heart problems that make them sicker. But because they are younger, they tend to recover sooner and better than the elderly. Patients, well aware now of the severity of the virus, are also coming in sooner, and are less likely to be admitted directly to the ICU.

site:https://dcds.instructure.com/eportfolios/5998/Home/TONTONindo_Tale_of_the_Nine_Tailed_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__Tale_of_the_Nine_Tailed_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

“In no way is there overconfidence, but we’ve done this before,” Silka said. “We’re at the stage of keeping up, and with the advances in our understanding of the disease, the length of stay for these patients is less and we’re seeing better outcomes.”

A Regional spokeswoman said it was difficult to see a clear downward trend in death rates over the eight months treating COVID patients. But a study by HCA Healthcare, Regional’s parent company, found that death rates dropped from March to August at three New York hospitals, from 25.6% to 17.6%, after accounting for increasingly younger patients. The median length of hospital stay was down from seven days in April to six in September.

site:https://dcds.instructure.com/eportfolios/6012/Home/TONTONindo_One_Piece_Episode_952_Sub_Indo_2020FILM__One_Piece_Episode_952_Flim_Gratis_Subtitle_Indonesia

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 23: Registered Nurses Julia Orona, left, and Joy Pastores go over patient information at Regional Medical Center in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
Some of the improvements can be found on Regional’s second-floor COVID ward, where patients routinely receive the steroid Dexamethasone to reduce inflammation in the lungs and get earlier access to less-intrusive breathing treatments.

“We’re trying to keep them afloat up here, so they don’t have to be intubated in the ICU,” Thurstone said. They don’t succeed every time — last weekend four patients were transferred down to the ICU. But for nurses who have been working the 10 months of the pandemic, donning and doffing protective gowns, masks and gloves each time they see a patient, “it’s gratifying to see people turn the corner,” she said.

site:https://www.guest-articles.com/news/on-bay-areas-busiest-covid-ward-doom-and-gloom-returns-but-more-hope-for-second-wave-of-patients-30-11-2020

In the early days, when lucky patients recovered and were finally released, hospital staff would line the hallways as the wheelchairs of survivors passed and, like at hospitals across the country, played the Beatles’ “Here Comes The Sun.” It was a triumphant hymn after beating the long odds against a deadly enemy.

At Regional, they don’t really play it anymore. With so many patients going home, the novelty seems to have worn off. And that’s not a bad thing, nurse Thurstone said. Maybe, she said, “it’s a sign of victory and progress.”

site:https://tokajer377.medium.com/6-queer-historical-figures-you-thought-were-straight-ea9de7536ac4

Until Thursday, it looked like Juan Flores was making progress, too.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!