National Post (National Edition)

THREE BROTHERS ON COVID-19 FRONT LINES

SONS OF AN EMERGENCY ROOM DOCTOR BATTLE THE PANDEMIC IN NEW YORK, MIAMI AND BOSTON

- NICK BROWN

Emergency room doctor Michael D’Urso has had some bleak days on the front lines of New York City’s battle against the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Intubated patients sometimes spend days waiting for beds in overcrowde­d intensive care units. Seemingly stable patients suddenly start deteriorat­ing rapidly.

On one recent shift, 15 of 23 nurses were out sick, many with symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s. Those remaining scrambled to care for some 20 patients at a time, more than double what is normal.

The tough days make D’Urso appreciate a unique comfort amid the relentless trauma — a sympatheti­c ear from his brother, an identical twin, who does the identical job in a Miami emergency room.

For Dennis D’Urso in Miami the harrowing tales from Michael can feel like a unsettling glimpse into his future. The ER where Dennis works is starting to fill with COVID-19 patients with COVID-19, but Michael’s has been deluged for weeks in what has been the hardest-hit U.S. city.

The new coronaviru­s had infected nearly 168,000 people in New York City as of Tuesday evening — killing nearly 18,000. It had infected nearly 12,000 and killed 324 in Miami-Dade County.

“We’re bracing,” Dennis says.

Emergency medicine is the D’Urso family business. Their father, James D’Urso, worked for 35 years as an emergency doctor outside Boston, regaling his sons with “the coolest stories” of saving lives and diagnosing strange diseases, Michael says.

Their younger brother, 28-year-old Tom, also works in the ER as a technician at North Shore Medical Center Salem Hospital, in Salem, Massachuse­tts.

The twins were nearly inseparabl­e for 30 of their 31 years — together for college and even medical school. Pursuing separate residencie­s was a chance to form separate identities.

Instead, the crisis is forging a new kind of closeness, as the brothers learn their craft on the front lines of the worst pandemic in a century.

“We talk almost every day,” Dennis says. “We might tell each other, ‘Man, I’m really having a bad day.’”

‘REALLY PAINFUL’

Michael works at New York-Presbyteri­an Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, though he is currently serving a four-week rotation at nearby Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center.

With hospitals and intensive care units overrun, his patients can live in the ER for days. Families aren’t allowed to visit. Doctors are often too busy to keep them informed. Sometimes, he says, relatives call seeking updates on patients who have already died.

One recent night, three seemingly health patients “crashed” without warning.

“It can be so demoralizi­ng, working with patients and not knowing how to help them,” Michael says.

One example hit him particular­ly hard. At Brookdale, he intubated an obese woman whose oxygen saturation had dipped to a critically low 60 per cent.

Intubation­s are meant to stabilize such patients, but this one continued to deteriorat­e and died within an hour.

“It was really painful,” Michael says. “I’m the one who put the tube down her throat. At the time you feel like you’re saving a life.”

Walking home after a recent late shift, at about 2 a.m., two men jumped Michael in his normally sleepy Brooklyn neighbourh­ood, pushing him to the ground and rifling through his pockets.

He yelled: “I’m a doctor and I have coronaviru­s!”

He laughs about it now. It was a lie, but it worked. The men sprinted off; Michael escaped unharmed.

In Massachuse­tts, also among the hardest-hit U.S. states, Tom D’Urso, the ER technician, is often the first to see ER patients. He takes their vital signs and temperatur­e, and guides them between units.

His hospital has tripled its intensive-care capacity to account for COVID-19 patients, Tom says, adding that he’ll sometimes arrive to find as many as three patients already on ventilator­s. One elderly woman whose health was declining asked doctors to ignore a prior “Do Not Intubate” order.

“She was afraid of dying,” Tom says. “I could see the fear in her face.”

He doesn’t know whether she survived.

Dennis hears his brothers’ stories and knows he could soon face similar challenges.

At Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, where he works, COVID-19 patients were initially only treated by attending physicians, with residents left back to conserve scarce personal protective equipment. That’s changed now that coronaviru­s patients are the majority, Dennis says.

Anxiety is surging. A few medical workers — including one fellow resident — have tested positive for the virus, Dennis says. Doctors wear protective gear at all times.

“We’re introducin­g ourselves to each other because we can’t see who’s behind the mask,” he says.

Some colleagues, he says, are considerin­g covering patients with garbage bags during intubation­s, cutting holes for their mouths, in hopes it might help stop the spread of infections.

“Everyone is worried if we’re safe,” he says.

The twins’ mother, Linda D’Urso, shares that fear. She tears up in a phone interview as she says, “I think they need a big hug right about now.”

Linda worries for their mental health, too. “They’re going to wind up with PTSD,” she says.

James, 68, knows the risks on a personal level but also understand­s the drive to save patients. He recalled a story from 20 years ago, when he put his uncovered face inches from a man with meningococ­cemia, a potentiall­y fatal infectious disease.

“I needed vital informatio­n before he passed out,” says James, who was misted with the man’s saliva, then immediatel­y took an antibiotic. He escaped infection.

TELLING STORIES

James, who primarily worked nights, didn’t intend to kindle his sons’ passions all those years ago, spinning stories after his shift as they prepared for school.

“I’ve seen too many people follow their father’s footsteps,” he says, “when it wasn’t the right career.”

As their interest deepened, James made sure to mention the lives he couldn’t save, the frustratio­n of incompeten­t colleagues. On drives home, he would see constructi­on crews tell his boys they might consider a career in constructi­on or another trade.

“Electricia­ns and plumbers do pretty well,” he recalls telling them.

But he understand­s why his sons chose medicine.

“For something challengin­g,” he says, “you can’t beat the ER.”

Now, he enjoys the camaraderi­e. He likes second-guessing his boys when they tell him how they treat sick patients. He says he’s impressed with how much they learned in medical school; his sons say they’re impressed with how much he remembers.

James knows his sons are taking risks. It makes him recall a game Michael and Dennis used to play as children, climbing part-ways up the staircase and jumping off, each brother trying to leap from the greater height.

“In one way, you want to hold them back, because it’s dangerous,” he says. “But in another way you don’t, because you want them to be adventurou­s in life.

“Together,” he says, “they’ve done things they wouldn’t have done alone.”

FOR SOMETHING CHALLENGIN­G,

YOU CAN’T BEAT THE ER

 ?? JEENAH MOON /REUTERS ?? Michael D’Urso, an emergency-room doctor dealing with the coronaviru­s pandemic in a New York City hospital, chats
online with his identical twin brother, Dennis, right, who does the same job in a Miami emergency room.
JEENAH MOON /REUTERS Michael D’Urso, an emergency-room doctor dealing with the coronaviru­s pandemic in a New York City hospital, chats online with his identical twin brother, Dennis, right, who does the same job in a Miami emergency room.

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