Lodi News-Sentinel

Hospitals prepare for wave of mental health disorders among their workers

- By Del Quentin Wilber

WASHINGTON — Nurse Camille Davis has watched more than 30 patients die from coronaviru­s infection, and has sobbed while holding her phone close to them so loved ones could say their goodbyes. Her long drives home are filled with worry about transmitti­ng the disease to her 8year-old son.

“I had a colleague who wanted to quit, it was too much for her, and I told her, ‘We can’t quit. We have to keep working until we get sick,’” said Davis, a nurse at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan. “That is how we are getting through this. But I wonder what we will be left to deal with when it’s all over. I’m worried I will develop PTSD.”

Hospital administra­tors say Davis’ experience­s are hardly unique, and that is why they expect to confront a surge of mental health disorders affecting physicians and nurses who battled COVID-19. As many as 20% to 25% of health care workers in hard-hit areas, experts say, are likely to develop disorders such as anxiety, depression or post-traumatic stress — a rate similar to what is reported in soldiers returning from combat.

“The degree of stress that front-line healthcare workers are experienci­ng is extraordin­ary,” said Dr. Dennis Charney, the dean of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai and an authority on post-traumatic stress disorder. “There is a massive amount of stress that is comparable to a war.”

Mental health practition­ers pointed to the suicide late last month of Dr. Lorna Breen as a warning flare. Colleagues said the 49-year-old Breen, an emergency room physician at NewYork-Presbyteri­an Allen Hospital in Manhattan, took her life after becoming overwhelme­d by the volume of coronaviru­s patients who died on her watch.

“People at these elite medical institutio­ns are talented, discipline­d, strong and resilient,” said Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman, the chair of psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center, where Breen was an assistant professor of emergency medicine. “But everyone has a breaking point. Tragically, in her case, her dedication pushed past the breaking point.”

Health care profession­als said the potential for trouble is particular­ly acute in New York, which has emerged as ground zero in the U.S. for COVID19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s.

Its hospitals have been crushed by an onslaught of severely ill patients. With no proven treatments or cures, physicians and nurses say they have often felt powerless to prevent the sickest from dying. Nearly 14,000 people have perished from the disease in the city, health officials say. During the height of the outbreak a month ago, doctors at Mt. Sinai Hospital were reporting at least 20 deaths a day. Typically, the hospital has one or two.

“The mortality that even veteran clinicians are witnessing has been massive and devastatin­g to healthcare workers,” Lieberman said.

With families barred from hospitals, providers have struggled to maintain emotional distance from their patients. Doctors have been forced to relay final messages from loved ones. Nurses have become comforters — holding their patients’ hands, brushing their hair before FaceTime calls with relatives. Such intimate interactio­ns, psychiatri­sts said, exacerbate­s the stress of a patient succumbing to the virus.

Then there is the fear — of catching the disease and bringing it home to their families.

“This is very hard on them,” said Dr. Marra Ackerman, a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine. “This pushes against what they would normally do: go into a room, bring a patient a cup of tea, check on a bandage. Instead, they have to limit their time in there to protect themselves, to limit their exposure. They worry about giving this to their families.”

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