Houston Chronicle

Crisis nurses, first deployed to help in New York, now find selves on the virus front lines in Texas

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

EDINBURG — Crisis nurse Catrina Rugar was in full protective gear, checking a ventilated patient at a new COVID-19 unit in the Rio Grande Valley, when a doctor stopped to ask how old the man was: 40.

“They keep getting younger,” Rugar said.

Doctor and nurse bemoaned how people in Texas and Florida were ignoring pandemic restrictio­ns.

“No one’s seeing us drown in patients,” Rugar said.

Rugar is part of an army of thousands of nurses and other medical staff who were deployed first to New York at the start of the pandemic, then to South Texas this month to battle the virus.

Contracted by staffing agencies that set up temporary offices in Rio Grande Valley hotels, registered nurses are paid $95 an hour ($142 an hour for overtime) plus travel expenses to work 12-hour shifts, seven days a week for months at a time (nurse practition­er jobs pay more).

“You thought N.Y.C. was the biggest activation in American history with 4,500 medical profession­als? So did we,” the Krucial Staffing agency said in a job posting on Facebook last week seeking nurses and other medical staff. “Our operations have moved to the great state of Texas. We are on track to eclipse that number.”

Charter buses and vans ferried nurses from Valley hospitals to hotels this week, where staff placed “Health care heroes” signs on their doors, thank you banners in lobbies and ear plugs at the front desks for those on night shift.

Rugar, who worked at 530-bed DHR Health in Edinburg, said the hospital was better prepared than those she staffed early in the pandemic in Harlem and the Bronx.

However, the Texas facility still was in crisis, she said, forced to cope with shortages of equipment and personnel amid a seemingly endless stream of critically ill patients.

One of the women on a ventilator she cared for last week already had lost her husband to COVID-19.

“We just have to try our best,” said Rugar, 34, who has worked as an emergency room nurse for a decade. “We’re making progress.”

Rugar, who lives in Crystal River, Fla., said she was skeptical about the pandemic when she arrived in New York but quickly realized the severity of the risk and was “a changed person” when she left 39 days later.

Her husband and brother are nursing assistants temporaril­y assigned to a different South Texas hospital. But Rugar said even her Cuban American family members back in Florida had their doubts.

“There’s people saying, ‘Oh, the media’s lying. The numbers are fake.’ There’s a lack of trust,” she said — until people get infected. “Then they want all the help they can get.”

She planned to return to Florida this week with her husband and brother to quarantine for two weeks, then continue working at COVID units there.

Jaime Zamora, 30, of Santa Fe Springs also dis eployed in Texas.

Zamora had just graduated in February when the pandemic started, and he said he went straight to New York because “I wanted to find a way to help.”

In New York, he worked the day shift on a psychiatri­c medical unit full of COVID-19 patients at Bellevue Hospital. Leyva worked the night shift. In the evenings at shift change, their spirits lifted when residents of an adjacent apartment building would open their windows and clap.

That doesn’t happen in Texas, and after three weeks Zamora said he often feels drained, emotionall­y and physically. He’s seeing more people infecting their loved ones.

“I’m constantly arranging FaceTime calls with entire families. I’ve seen many brothers and sisters crying. It’s a family disease,” he said.

A nursing job’s waiting for Zamora at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center. But he plans to stay in Texas for at least another week, maybe two.

“That’s what I became a nurse for: to help,” he said. “I’m working every single day until it’s time to go home.”

 ?? Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er ?? “It would be an honor to serve in Houston,” Joana Ansah, a registered nurse from Mount Sinai South Nassau hospital in New York, said as she prepared to administer COVID-19 tests at Fallbrook Church in Houston.
Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er “It would be an honor to serve in Houston,” Joana Ansah, a registered nurse from Mount Sinai South Nassau hospital in New York, said as she prepared to administer COVID-19 tests at Fallbrook Church in Houston.
 ?? Carolyn Cole / Tribune News Service ?? Nurses treat a patient at DHR Health in Edinburg in one of several new COVID-19 units establishe­d there.
Carolyn Cole / Tribune News Service Nurses treat a patient at DHR Health in Edinburg in one of several new COVID-19 units establishe­d there.

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