The Irish Mail on Sunday

A mum in her 40s FaceTimes her two young sons. ‘I’ll see you in Heaven,’ she says... her words haunt me all night

-

Are you daunted by the prospect of a few more weeks in lockdown? Read this week’s searing diary of a doctor working on the coronaviru­s front line at a London hospital – and then count your blessings…

MONDAY ONE MOTHER’S UNBEARABLE CALL TO HER BOYS

WE HAVE been asked to re-use disposable surgical gowns – they’ll be laundered but I am not sure the plan will work as they are made of very flimsy material.

I’m still walking around with bin bags over my shoes. Whatever British health secretary Matt Hancock says about there being enough PPE, it’s not true. Our visors are wiped with bleach after every use, which means that when you put one back on, the stench hits you like a train – and stays with you all day.

We are doing everything we can to keep patients in the high dependency unit and not send them to intensive care because there is only a 50-50 survival rate there.

This morning, a patient in his late 30s is not tolerating continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). This is delivered by a large mask attached to a machine that pumps oxygen. It can be extremely uncomforta­ble and claustroph­obic – and many patients get very agitated and anxious wearing it. We use it as a final breathing treatment before a patient becomes so ill that they need to go to intensive care.

I try to reassure him as he lies on his front, writhing in distress. He suddenly jolts up and pulls it off before vomiting everywhere. His oxygen levels are so low that he needs to put the mask back on but the tears are welling up. ‘No, please, no more,’ he begs as a stand-off ensues. ‘It’s like having my face being held to water and almost drowning.’ His oxygen levels aren’t bad enough for him to be fully intubated on a ventilator just yet – but if he doesn’t play ball that’s where he will end up. We sedate him with Lorazepam, an anti-anxiety drug, so we can get the mask back on.

In the afternoon, a woman in her late 40s nosedives despite being on CPAP. She has to go to intensive care where she’ll be put into an induced coma so she can be placed on a ventilator.

She FaceTimes her two young sons and their stepfather before going under. It’s unbearable. ‘I’ll see you in Heaven,’ she says between gasps as the call comes to its natural end as the anaestheti­sts appear. That night I can’t sleep – the ‘see you in Heaven’ remark swirls around and around my head.

TUESDAY PATIENT WHO REFUSES TO BE A BURDEN

IT’S no surprise that there have been severe outbreaks in old people’s homes. We’ve been doing all we can not to admit very elderly people who have symptoms. Why? Because it would be a one-way ticket. We call carers to advise them to isolate individual­s in their rooms. Have we abandoned our elderly like lambs to the slaughter (as one former politician has claimed)? I can’t dwell on that. There’s too much on my conscience already. What concerns me even more than our elderly is where all the other patients have gone? We’ve had a stark drop in admissions for patients we normally see with illnesses such as heart attacks and strokes. Are they dying at home?

In the afternoon, an alarm sounds because the heart rate of a man in his 50s is crashing. A normal heart rate is 60 to 100 beats per minute – his has dropped to 25 because he took his CPAP mask off. We franticall­y get a crash trolley ready to resuscitat­e him should his heart stop. It’s a hair-raising moment. I stand over him watching him through my bleach-smeared visor as his heart rate begins to recover once the mask is back on.

Not long before the end of the day, a man in his late 70s is coming to the end of the road. Various health issues mean he isn’t a candidate for intensive care. I call his daughter. ‘We may need to think about making him comfortabl­e and ending treatment,’ I say gently. She knows he isn’t a candidate for intensive care but she asks anyway – fortunatel­y, there isn’t a fight.

We’ll give him tonight and see how he is in the morning.

These telephone calls have become almost monotonous. Sounds terrible, doesn’t it?

WEDNESDAY WE’VE STOPPED BEING DOCTORS

THE decision is taken in the morning that we need to give palliative care to the gentleman from yesterday. He hasn’t improved overnight at all – and just isn’t responding to

CPAP. It sounds awful but on a logistical level, we need the bed and the CPAP machine back.

I call his daughter again to let her know it is time. Understand­ably, she wants to say goodbye – along with her four siblings and a number of grandchild­ren.

The trouble is that if they all come in, they will be using up valuable PPE and we don’t have the resources. Between us, we agree that each sibling can come in for five minutes at their own risk – but we can’t allow the grandchild­ren in too.

After their visit in the afternoon, and just before taking the mask off, it is time to draw up an anticipato­ry drug chart – a plan to keep him comfortabl­e in the last hours of his life with sedatives and painkiller­s.

I cross off all other treatments on his form – and his mask is removed shortly afterwards.

It feels like we have, in many ways, stopped acting as doctors. At no point do I actually examine him – I just look at the various numbers on his charts and know that his time is up. Have we become little more than glorified vets?

He’s gone by the time I leave.

THURSDAY A FLASH OF HOPE IN A DARK PERIOD

THERE is one lady in her late 30s on the Covid ward who has severe learning difficulti­es. She has been here for several weeks. This morning she is particular­ly distressed, crying out in discomfort. Communicat­ion is almost impossible – she can’t speak and her mother, who acts as her carer, isn’t allowed in because she is elderly.

Our masks make calming the patient very difficult. Even without them, we’re not sure how much she understand­s. Although she has been improving and hopefully will be discharged soon, she can’t swallow, so she has a tube in her nose administer­ing nutrition. She’s trying to say something but there are multiple alarms going off and I can’t work out what she wants or needs. I try holding her hand to comfort her but she is writhing around. I have a backlog of patients to see – I can’t stay for ever.

There’s some good news in the afternoon – a lady in her early 70s who has been struggling for a couple of weeks seems to be making real improvemen­ts. Her son is very grateful on the phone – he’s almost overwhelme­d. I can’t emphasise how nice it is to have flashes of hope during this dark time.

FRIDAY BODY BAGS WAIT TO BE COLLECTED

SOME of the staff have got the virus and are now patients, including several people in intensive care. There are other staff members who have loved-ones in the hospital. It’s horribly close to home.

Despite this, there is a sense the black cloud which has been looming over the hospital has lifted slightly. Compared to when the crisis began, it feels less like a war zone.

That said, the sight of body bags outside the intensive care unit, waiting to be collected, still jars every time – including this morning.

One of my patients, a man in his mid-60s, is doing really well and can be released today. He is very philosophi­cal and starts talking about leaving his City job when I let him know the good news. ‘I’ve had a scare,’ he says, half-biting his lip. ‘This is my wake-up call’

In the afternoon, I tend to a patient in his early 70s who can’t speak English. He’s one of a few nonEnglish-speaking patients we are seeing.

Normally they wouldn’t be entitled to such prolonged NHS treatment but we are politely avoiding asking any questions. As medics, our job is to save lives, not get muddled in politics. But I can’t help but feel a slight pang of discomfort that we have rationed beds and treatment for those who have contribute­d to the NHS all their lives.

There is talk among staff in the afternoon about vaccine trials. It’s hoped they can be rolled out by the end of the year. Could this be our way out of this mess?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland