Orlando Sentinel

Virus fight personal for Ala. doctor

Survivor calls public disregard to masks, safety dishearten­ing

- By Jay Reeves

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Dr. Michael Saag spends much of his time treating patients fighting for their lives and working with colleagues overwhelme­d and exhausted by the relentless battle against the COVID-19 pandemic.

But he enters a different world when he walks out the door of his Alabama clinic: one where many don’t wear masks, keep their distance from others or even seem aware of the intense struggle being waged against a virus that has cost more than 140,000 lives nationwide and made many — including the doctor — seriously ill.

The disconnect is devastatin­g.

“It’s a mixture of emotions, from anger to being demoralize­d to bewilderme­nt to frustratio­n,” Saag said.

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have increased an average of more than 1,500 a day over the past week in Alabama, bringing the total to more than 62,100 since the pandemic began in March. Nearly 1,300 people have died and health officials say fewer than 15% of the state’s intensive care beds are available for new patients. Some hospitals are completely out of room.

It’s not just an Alabama problem.

About 250 miles from Birmingham, Dr. Chad Dowell warns that his hospital in tiny Indianola, Mississipp­i, is filling up and so are others, making it difficult to locate beds for the sickest patients even as people debate on social media whether the pandemic is real.

Inside the hospital at the University of Alabama at

Birmingham, doctors and nurses in protective gear rush from one emergency to another. They struggle to comfort heartbroke­n visitors forced to say goodbye to dying relatives via cellphone, Saag said, all while coping with the stress of whether they’ll be infected next.

The sharp increase in confirmed virus cases in Alabama has coincided with the reopening of restaurant­s, bars, theaters, gyms, sports leagues and churches that were all closed down when the virus first hit. Although most have opened at a diminished capacity and with restrictio­ns in place, many patrons haven’t been following recommende­d precaution­s.

In Birmingham, where Saag lives, it has been common to see fewer than half the people inside stores wearing masks. The doctor said he got particular­ly dispirited recently after stopping by a restaurant on the way home from work to pick up a takeout order of sushi. There were as many as 60 people inside, he said.

“Myself and one other person were the only two people wearing masks. And everybody else, not only were they not wearing masks, they were congregati­ng together,” he said. “And they look at me like I’m some sort of pariah wearing a mask.”

In response, Gov. Kay Ivey last week ordered all Alabama residents 6 and older to wear masks when in public and within 6 feet of someone who is not a relative. Cast against a pandemic that has become increasing­ly political, the move drew praise as a potentiall­y life-saving step and criticism from those who called it an unnecessar­y affront to freedom.

Saag said he hopes the order helps, but it all depends on compliance.

Ivey said the rule will be hard to enforce, and some police and sheriff’s offices have said they won’t even try.

During the initial outbreak, doctors and nurses were hailed as heroes in the fight against COVID-19. Some say they now feel more like cannon fodder in a war that has become increasing­ly divisive.

“People continue to regard the virus as a political scheme or conspiracy theory. People continue to ignore recommende­d guidelines on how to help slow the virus’ spread. People continue to complain about wearing a mask.

We’ve got to do better as a community,” Dowell, the Mississipp­i doctor, wrote in a Facebook message released by South Sunflower County hospital.

For Saag, the personal.

In March, both he and his adult son came down with the virus after a trip to Manhattan when the epidemic was raging there. First came a cough, followed by fever, a headache, body aches and what Saag called “fuzzy thinking,” or an inability to concentrat­e.

“The mornings I’d feel fine, thought I was done with it. And then every night it would come right back as if it was just starting all over again,” he said.

During eight suffocatin­g nights, Saag wasn’t sure whether he’d survive without a ventilator. It never came to that. He is now

fight

is recovered and feels closer than ever to the people he treats.

“When I talk to a patient and I say, ‘Hey, I’ve had it too,’ it’s like we’re connected in a way that I really, honestly haven’t felt with patients ever before — and I’ve been doing this 40 years,” Saag said.

Outside the examinatio­n room, Saag has participat­ed in news conference­s to encourage basic public health practices, but he knows many people just aren’t listening.

He said it is dishearten­ing to see a disregard for safety measures and worries about Alabama’s future at a time when the virus is posing more of a threat than ever.

“I’m just thinking, ‘Oh, my goodness. We’re going to be in trouble very soon,’ ” Saag said.

 ?? AMANDA CHAMBERS/UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM ?? Dr. Michael Saag, left, speaks with a colleague this month in Birmingham, Alabama. Saag survived COVID-19 and now treats patients with the disease.
AMANDA CHAMBERS/UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM Dr. Michael Saag, left, speaks with a colleague this month in Birmingham, Alabama. Saag survived COVID-19 and now treats patients with the disease.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States