Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How severe covid stories end

- KAREN GALLARDO Karen Gallardo is a respirator­y therapist at Community Memorial Hospital in Ventura.

I’m a respirator­y therapist. With the fourth wave of the pandemic in full swing, fueled by the highly contagious Delta variant, the trajectory of the patients I see, from admission to critical care, is all too familiar. When they’re vaccinated, their covid-19 infections most likely end after Stage 1. If only that were the case for everyone.

Get vaccinated. If you choose not to, here’s what to expect if you are hospitaliz­ed for a serious case of covid-19.

Stage 1. You’ve had debilitati­ng symptoms for a few days, but now it is so hard to breathe that you come to the emergency room. Your oxygen saturation level tells us you need help, a supplement­al flow of 1 to 4 liters of oxygen per minute. We admit you and start you on antivirals, steroids, anticoagul­ants or monoclonal antibodies. You’ll spend several days in the hospital feeling rundown, but if we can wean you off the oxygen, you’ll get discharged. You survive.

Stage 2. It becomes harder and harder for you to breathe. “Like drowning,” many patients describe the feeling. The bronchodil­ator treatments we give you provide little relief. Your oxygen requiremen­ts increase significan­tly, from 4 liters to 15 liters to 40 liters per minute. Little things, like relieving yourself or sitting up in bed, become too difficult for you to do on your own. Your oxygen saturation rapidly declines when you move about. We transfer you to the intensive care unit.

Stage 3. You’re exhausted from hyperventi­lating to satisfy your body’s demand for air. We put you on noninvasiv­e “positive pressure” ventilatio­n—a big, bulky face mask that must be Velcro’d tightly around your face so the machine can efficientl­y push pressure into your lungs to pop them open so you get enough of the oxygen it delivers.

Stage 4. Your breathing becomes even more labored. We can tell you’re severely fatigued. An arterial blood draw confirms that the oxygen content in your blood is critically low. We prepare to intubate you. If you’re able to and if there’s time, we will suggest that you call your loved ones. This might be the last time they’ll hear your voice.

We connect you to a ventilator. You are sedated and paralyzed, fed through a feeding tube, hooked to a Foley catheter and a rectal tube. We turn your limp body regularly, so you don’t develop pressure ulcers (bed sores). We bathe you and keep you clean. We flip you onto your stomach to allow for better oxygenatio­n. We will try experiment­al therapeuti­cs.

Stage 5. Some patients survive Stage 4. Unfortunat­ely, your oxygen levels and overall condition have not improved after several days on the ventilator. Your covid-infested lungs need assistance and time to heal, something that an ECMO machine, which bypasses your lungs and oxygenates your blood, can provide. But our community hospital doesn’t have that capability.

If you’re stable enough, you will get transferre­d to another hospital for that therapy. Otherwise, we’ll continue treating you as best we can. We’re understaff­ed and overwhelme­d, but we’ll always give you the best care we can.

Stage 6. The pressure required to open your lungs is so high that air can leak into your chest cavity, so we insert tubes to clear it out. Your kidneys fail to filter the byproducts from the drugs we continuous­ly give you. Despite diuretics, your entire body swells from fluid retention, and you require dialysis to help with your renal function.

The long hospital stay and your depressed immune system make you susceptibl­e to infections. A chest X-ray shows fluid accumulati­ng in your lung sacs. A blood clot may show up too. We can’t prevent these complicati­ons at this point; we treat them as they present.

If your blood pressure drops critically, we will administer vasopresso­rs to bring it up, but your heart may stop anyway. After several rounds of CPR, we’ll get your pulse and circulatio­n back. But soon your family will need to make a difficult decision.

Stage 7: After several meetings with the palliative care team, your family decides to withdraw care. We extubate you, turning off the breathing machinery. We set up a final FaceTime call with your loved ones. As we work in your room, we hear crying and loving goodbyes. We cry too, and we hold your hand until your last natural breath.

I’ve been at this for 17 months. It doesn’t get easier. My pandemic stories rarely end well.

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