Friday 17 April 2020

Covid diary, a couple of weeks in

This has been a very strange time for the world. Sometimes when you pause, it's almost like nothing is really happening - is Covid really happening? When I am in the garden or stirring a pot of soup, I can almost forget. But then when it quietens down, the calamity that has befallen the world is so incredibly striking. So many people have become unwell and so many unfortunate people have died.

We have done incredibly well in Australia to stave off the crisis. With each passing day, we hear news of lesser numbers of new infections. I feel this quiet pride in being Australian - even there are plenty of idiots who are still doing the wrong thing, I believe the majority of Australians have listened to the government and done the right thing.

The hospital has become an eerily quiet place too. With most non-urgent elective surgeries cancelled, the wards are quieter than usual. The surge in numbers of doctors and nurses with the altered rostering means that we actually have time to pay attention to our patients, sometimes a luxury that we do not have with skeleton staffing. It has highlighted to us how over stretched we usually are, and how incredibly hard the staff work every day (even outside the Covid crisis). We looked after about a dozen Covid patients in the ICU, most of them requiring either a short stay for observation and not requiring intubation, or intubated for several days and then successfully recovered. A couple of patients died, and it was a strange feeling to read about them in the newspaper afterwards. People die in the ICU every day, sometimes I think, why don't we hear about those deaths?

I have been fortunate to have so much social support from people around me. Friends I haven't heard from for ages have texted to wish me well. I got some nice emails from music friends too, encouraging me to remember a time when we created music with joy and carefreeness. I have also been doing fun music projects with friends around the world, each of us recording tracks to be put together. I feel grateful for these little tokens of connection - we are not alone, and we will get to the other side of this. Life still goes on, it hasn't been put on hold - our human connections are still there despite all the difficulties that have arisen in these times.

6 comments:

  1. We all hope for continuation of the apparent decline in the epidemic, as you are seeing it from the front lines. I fear that the success of social distancing will be reinterpreted to signal that it can end. Really evil people (like flaunting Nazi signs etc) are creating a disturbance here in Michigan to pressure the end of the counter-virus measures. Sad.

    be well... mae at maefood.blogspot.com

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    1. Hope you are staying safe Mae, it looks crazy there x

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  2. My 92-yo mom is in the hospital right now in Arkansas (not COVID19 related) and it is KILLING me to not be able to go see her and make sure they nurses are taking care of her properly. I know how normally overworked the nurses are and how much they appreciate having a family member with the patient to keep their water cup filled with fresh water and ice and pillows fluffed so that they, the nurses can focus on nursing. I hope our nurses in Arkansas are finding themselves with more time to take care of patients now the way that you said you nurses in Australia are.

    You have a good point about why do we only hear about COVID19 patients that die in the ICU.

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    1. Nurses are our lifeline for sure, they keep us all grounded . Hope your mom is doing OK x

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  3. i trust you are keeping well, and staying as cheerful as you can. i have been miserable myself, especially at the start of all this but i'm getting better - and happier! stay well. cheers Sherry x

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    1. Hang in there Sherry, the dawn is in sight after this long darkness x

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