Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanoog­a nurses help with coronaviru­s fight in NYC

- BY WYATT MASSEY STAFF WRITER

With New York City in the center of the national conversati­on about the coronaviru­s — the state leading the country in confirmed cases and deaths — Richard and Autumn Boyd made the 800-mile journey north from Chattanoog­a to be on the front lines.

The two met while attending Southern Adventist University to become registered nurses and got married in June 2019. Autumn worked in the intensive care unit at Erlanger East Hospital, while Richard worked in the cardiovasc­ular ICU at Erlanger’s downtown campus.

The two nurses made the decision last month to step away from Erlanger. The couple had been interested in traveling as nurses for some time, Richard said. As the impact of COVID-19 became clear, they narrowed their focus on New York City.

“When this came up, we were just like, we have to go and help,” Richard said. “It’s the greatest opportunit­y for us to be part of something so significan­t.”

The Boyds are entering the third week of a 13-week rotation at the Lower Manhattan campus of the New York-Presbyteri­an hospital system. For four days a week, from Thursday to Sunday, they work 12-hour night shifts in the hospital’s ICU where COVID-19 patients are treated.

Seeing up close the impacts of the virus — which as of Wednesday has infected nearly 1.2 million Americans and killed at least 65,000 — is daunting, Richard said.

“You hear things coming in from different folks, from doctors or nurses about their experience­s, but it didn’t prepare us completely for how sick these people are,” the 33-year-old said.

Patients with the coronaviru­s are coming into the hospital and experienci­ng major organ failure or acute respirator­y distress and dying within one to two days, Richard said. Patients are often scared and unfamiliar with the ICU setting. Because of concerns about spreading the virus, visitors are not allowed in, leaving medical staff to provide end-oflife comfort to those who do not recover.

“That takes a toll on the patient, and it’s very difficult on the family because they can’t come up to the ICU to even say goodbye,”

“You hear things coming in from different folks, from doctors or nurses about their experience­s, but it didn’t prepare us completely for how sick these people are.” — RICHARD Boyd

Richard said.

The couple was nervous about coming to New York City, as much as they felt drawn to help those most in need, he said. The long days and being continuall­y confronted by how the deadly virus is changing lives takes a toll on health care workers. There is the stress of the new routine of wearing full personal protective equipment and knowing that caring for someone with COVID-19 puts health care workers at risk.

“There’s a lot of fatigue any time you’re working in an ICU or critical care environmen­t,” he said.

But the couple’s time in New York City has not been without uplifting moments. Fire trucks from a nearby station drive to the hospital campus every night for a lights-andsiren show at 7 p.m., part of a new citywide tradition of showing support for frontline workers each evening.

“When you’re going into your third or fourth shift and you’ve had a rough week and you’re walking into the hospital and you see all this support from the community, it definitely helps you out,” Richard said.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF RICHARD BOYD ?? Richard and Autumn Boyd stand in New York City after traveling from Chattanoog­a to be part of the COVID-19 response.
PHOTO COURTESY OF RICHARD BOYD Richard and Autumn Boyd stand in New York City after traveling from Chattanoog­a to be part of the COVID-19 response.

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