We are in an eerie
place at the moment.
Australians have
been watching the crisis unfold in front of our eyes – first in
China, then in Europe and now in the US. It feels close to us because
of the frightening numbers escalating every day in the news, at first
100 felt like a benchmark, then 1000, but now we are almost numbed by
the numbers and their inevitable increase.
Let me tell you
something from the frontline. There is nothing like something is
real, until you see it with
your own eyes.
It
is only real when you
stand, for the very first time, face-to-face with a patient infected
with Covid-19. When you see them coughing, when you see them wiping
their mouths, when you realise that their respiratory droplets are
not just near you, but on
you.
When
you realise that you are shielded from the virus behind just a piece
of plastic, or a corner of a gown, that is when it is real.
When
you need to tell them that you have to put them on a ventilator to
help them breathe, when they ring their families crying and saying
goodbye to them for potentially the last time, that is when it is
real.
When
you walk out of the room wondering if you had put your gear on right,
when you think maybe I am going to be one of the infected healthcare
workers in the news, that is when it is real.
For
the vast majority of the public, the coronavirus is still something
that is happening to somebody else. The people going to the beaches
and having house parties make me so angry. When I went into that room
to be with a Covid-infected patient for the first time, for the
second time, and then for the number of times that I cannot even
count, I am not just “doing my job” as people would expect me to.
I have a sense of professional responsibility to these people, this
is what I am trained to do. But I am appalled by the behaviour of
those people who put themselves at risk, who knowingly increase the
burden on the health system with a nonchalant attitude of “it won’t
affect me anyway because I am young”. Do these people not have
parents, grandparents, friends and neighbours who will be affected by
the virus? Do these people not wish for their loved ones to receive
health care when it is needed? How little disregard do they have for
the wellbeing of healthcare workers who are risking themselves to
help the community?
There
has been just a slow trickle of patients this week, one here and one
there. The rate of admission into the ICU is slow enough that we have
time to pause and reflect on our practices, trying to finetune
everything so we know what to do when the rush of patients arrives.
We have been preparing for weeks and the preparation itself is
mentally exhausting. It feels deceptively slow right now, the ICU
cleared of patients in anticipation for the tsunami that hasn’t
hit. I found myself even wondering at times if we over-reacted, but
just a quick glance at the news shows that the tsunami is real in
other places. We are just on the flat part of the curve, and we
desperately hope our social isolation measures have been enough.
It
has now been a week since I left my family in Sydney and quarantined
myself. I feel a huge sense of social responsibility towards them,
and I have decided not to go back to Sydney until I know for sure
that I will not be giving them the virus. That means I have to wait
for one of three scenarios to arise
(1)
The covid-19 crisis is over and numbers of infections have ground to
zero
(2)
I contract covid-19 and recover to gain immunity
(3)
I or one of my family members becomes critically ill with covid-19
and we have to say goodbye.
The
methodical analytical part of my brain has spat out these scenarios,
but none of them feel real right now. The coming weeks will be a huge
physical challenge if we must work massive hours, and an even greater
emotional challenge being in social isolation and dealing with the
stresses of work. I have never thought so hard about my self-care
ever.
I have also never been imbued with such a strong sense of
survival – every fiber of
my being is screaming I want to survive! I
want to stay physically well and mentally well. I want to come out of
the other side of this and chalk it up to another disaster I have
experienced and learned from. I look
so much forward to that day
when we are talking about all
this in the historical sense.
But
right now, we must live one day at a time.