Guest Post from David Berger

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Lifestyle

Battle Lines

 

The Coronavirus pandemic has been an unprecedented stress on health care delivery. There are more patients, sicker patients, requiring more resources than seems possible. The specter of health care workers becoming infected has introduced an element of fear that most practitioners have never even imagined. As a recently retired anesthesiologist, I have stayed in touch with my colleagues in the New York metropolitan area to get a gauge on their day to day existence.

David Berger

I have heard accounts of many health care workers who are conflicted on whether they should enter the fray or whether to sit this one out for their own safety and for the safety of their families. I myself wonder what I would do if I were not retired, with multiple risk factors and luckily isolated in a relatively safe zone. I know of several people who are sitting this one out, but just as many who have had to step up their hours as well as the intensity of work to meet the challenge.

 

We see accounts of health care workers in urban hospitals who are overwhelmed physically and emotionally, who are realistically fearful of getting sick because there is inadequate personal protective equipment for all practitioners. I’m sure these accounts are true, and am hard-pressed to understand how these situations developed. My heart goes out to those people who are sent to war without weapons.

 

Fortunately, the health system which I was associated with has exceptional resources, and I have not heard horror stories from my colleagues. The gist of what I have heard is that my colleagues are treating this just like any other challenge they have encountered in their careers. This challenge is unquestionably unique as the sheer unrelenting volume and intensity of disease has never been experienced except during wartime. The challenge is met through established channels of cooperation and decision making. That is because health care is a team effort. It requires resourceful administration and emergency planning. It requires the cooperation of multiple hospital departments in order to deploy services where they are required as well as to develop novel solutions to problems on the fly. It requires the dedication of health care workers to work harder and longer than they ever have before. In the trenches, teamwork is the only thing that gets people through the day and the only thing that gives people strength to get up and do it again the next day.

 

Today I saw a Facebook video from my hospital of a patient who was being discharged from the hospital after 17 days in the ICU. The entire hospital staff was lining the walls wearing masks and applauding the patient. There was a shedding of tears, but no hugs, just an occasional gloved fist-bump.

 

Everyone has seen a video like this. The difference for me was that I know this guy. He has worked at my hospital for 30 years and every person in the hospital knows him. In a week where many patients were dying despite the heroic efforts of the entire staff, he survived. It was a moment of victory in a season of death. The loss of countless patients was put in perspective by one friend who was saved. Health care workers must find a sense of detachment in order to stay sane. For a moment, that detachment was overwhelmed by the fact that health care is very, very personal. That experience provided the motivation to keep on going.

 

David Berger MD

Key West

April 2020

 

Comments

Paul Napolitano

Amazing story of comradery from the front lines. Thanks David.

One of our children’s close friends just graduated from nursing school recently, has been working 18 hour shifts, and now she is sick.

As Fred and Neil know, one of our closest and dearest friends had been in a coma for almost 30 days, hanging by a thread, and he just came out of it. He’s still on a ventilator and unable to speak, but finally pointing in the right direction. One of the miracles.

Another close friend was in the hospital for two weeks, now he is fine. But in the last week he lost both of his parents to the virus.
Rona Gura

Thank you for this. My niece is a pediatric intensive care nurse at NYU. I have never been more proud of her. Unfortunately, she just tested positive and is sidelined until she recovers. Her attitude has been I will be fine and, as soon as I am able, I will be returning to the ICU.
Brad Scherer

Great blog, David. Thank you for everything you and your coworkers do on a daily basis. Without heroes like you, we would be in even more trouble.
ODEY RAVIV

Thanks David for your insight and heart.
The inside information gives us all a view from an experienced friend.
Best to Paul and Rona's family and friends.
Vincent Russo

David
Being on the frontline like so many others - you are the heroes. Can't thank you enough.
Daniel Schwartz

Thank you for this insight. It brings into perspective the reality of all that is going on and the good that is being done to help.
Dana Charlton

Thank you very much for your poignant and compassionate blog, and for sharing your insight with us. I was particularly struck by your sentence "It was a moment of victory in a season of death."
I thank all of your colleagues and other medical personnel for their amazing work. Stay safe and stay well. Thank you again.

Submitted by MarilynGenoa on Sat, 04/18/2020 - 08:57

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Marilyn Genoa

Thank you. We never know which of our friends and colleagues have been horrifically impacted by this. My heart goes out to anyone who has a loved one or dear friend suffering from the virus. My sincerest condolences to everyone who’s lost someone to this virus. It’s all just unfathomable yet the incredible humanity we see around us remains amazing and uplifting
Victoria Drogin

David, thank you so much for sharing your perspective and insights. There is true heroism that often times we don’t see. It’s one thing to say “honor those on the front lines” it’s another to hear a little bit of what it’s really like to be there. Our hearts go out to those who have to make those difficult choices of whether to step up, or not. I can’t imagine.
Amparo Connors

Thank you David for sharing your personal perspective. I commend your colleagues and friends for continuing to battle. It is good to hear of some miracles amidst all the losses; the talent and potential lost can never be measured. My prayers are with all the people on the font lines, the patients battling and the scientists. We need a cure for this horrid virus!

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