Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 emergency doctors critical as result of virus

- KAREN WEISE AND VANESSA SWALES

SEATTLE — Two emergency medicine doctors, in New Jersey and Washington state, are in critical condition as a result of coronaviru­s, reinforcin­g concerns that the nation’s front-line medical workers are becoming especially vulnerable to the virus, the American College of Emergency Physicians said.

“A lot of us think that despite everything we do, we will probably be exposed,” said Dr. William Jaquis, the chair of the group. Still, he said, “The first reported case certainly sends a shockwave through the community.”

Emergency rooms represent a busy intake point for hospitals, where patients come in with symptoms but no diagnosis. As the coronaviru­s spreads during the typical flu season, emergency physicians are triaging large numbers of patients around the country with symptoms that could be the virus.

“As compared to anyone else at a hospital, you are operating with the most incomplete informatio­n,” said Dr. Angela Fusaro, an emergency doctor in Atlanta.

One of the ill physicians, a man in his 40s, is a doctor at EvergreenH­ealth Medical Center in Kirkland, Wash., a hospital near Seattle that has seen one of the largest concentrat­ions of cases in the United States.

“EvergreenH­ealth is providing care for one of our physicians who has a confirmed case of covid-19. He is in critical condition but stable,” the hospital said in a statement.

Jaquis said it appeared that the doctor had access to adequate protective equipment. “This was an area with an outbreak, so they were expecting and prepared. That obviously makes us more nervous.”

The other physician, a doctor in his 70s in Patterson, N.J., was also in isolation in intensive care. The doctor led his institutio­n’s emergency preparedne­ss and was admitted to the hospital several days ago with upper respirator­y problems, the physicians’ group said.

The nationwide shortage of N-95 protective masks has been concerning to doctors, who increasing­ly feel the need to use them in more situations to stay safe, Jaquis said.

Some emergency department­s are adapting their facilities to minimize the risk to health care providers and other patients, opening tents to triage patients outside their buildings and creating separate entrances for patients and doctors, who do not typically wear protective gear as they come and go.

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