"Just before the patient died, they looked at their nurse and said 'I think I made a mistake. I thought this was a hoax, but it's not,'" said Dr. Jane Appleby in a video statement obtained by USA TODAY. https://t.co/GAVDH2kngf
By Corina Knoll, Ali Watkins & Michael Rothfield @ NYTimes.com, July 11
On an afternoon in early April, while New York City was in the throes of what would be the deadliest days of the coronavirus pandemic, Dr. Lorna M. Breen found herself alone in the still of her apartment in Manhattan.
She picked up her phone and dialed her younger sister, Jennifer Feist.
The two were just 22 months apart and had the kind of bond that comes from growing up sharing a bedroom and wearing matching outfits. Ms. Feist, a lawyer in Charlottesville, Va., was accustomed to hearing from her sister nearly every day.
Lately, their conversations had been bleak.
Dr. Breen worked at NewYork-Presbyterian Allen Hospital in Upper Manhattan, where she supervised the emergency department. The unit had become a brutal battleground, with supplies depleting at a distressing rate and doctors and nurses falling ill. The waiting room was perpetually overcrowded. The sick were dying unnoticed.
Ms. Feist had taken to sleeping next to her phone in case her sister needed her after a late shift.
When Dr. Breen called this time, she sounded odd. Her voice was distant, as if she was in shock.
“I don’t know what to do,” she said. “I can’t get out of the chair.”
Dr. Breen was a consummate overachiever, one who directed her life with assurance.
When she graduated from medical school, she insisted on studying both emergency and internal medicine, although it meant a longer residency. She took up snowboarding, cello and salsa dancing as an adult. Once, after she had difficulty breathing at the beginning of a half-marathon, she finished the race, then headed to a hospital and diagnosed herself with pulmonary emboli — blood clots in the lungs that can be fatal.
In addition to managing a busy emergency department, she was in a dual degree master’s program at Cornell University.
Dr. Breen was gifted, confident, clever. Unflappable.
But the woman speaking to Ms. Feist that day was hesitant and confused.
Ms. Feist quickly arranged for her sister to be picked up by two friends who would ferry her to Baltimore, where Ms. Feist could meet them to take her to family in Virginia. When Dr. Breen finally climbed into Ms. Feist’s car that night, she was nearly catatonic, unable to answer simple questions. Her brain, her sister said, seemed broken [....]
"The assumption was that people would get better, and then it was over," says researcher Michael Peluso. But now doctors are discovering that #Covid19 can have long-term effects. https://t.co/Xc15GKJRBS
Comments
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/12/2020 - 1:45am
‘I Couldn’t Do Anything’: The Virus and an E.R. Doctor’s Suicide; Dr. Lorna Breen was unflappable — until she faced a new enemy.
By Corina Knoll, Ali Watkins & Michael Rothfield @ NYTimes.com, July 11
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/12/2020 - 1:58am
Deciphering the death drop
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/07/why-covid-death-rate-d...
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 07/13/2020 - 1:32pm
by artappraiser on Tue, 07/14/2020 - 4:30pm
good new Vox piece on long-term effects:
by artappraiser on Thu, 07/16/2020 - 7:11pm
by artappraiser on Fri, 07/17/2020 - 12:10am