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Near death, a woman says a vision made her call 911

Expert: Hallucinat­ions become more common

- Adrianna Rodriguez

Marilyn Schneider is an executive secretary at Ohio’s Cleveland Clinic where she gets her temperatur­e checked several times a day.

When the 57-year-old got home from work March 27, an intense chill suddenly overcame her, accompanie­d by a rising fever.

“It felt like something came up behind me and dropped a bucket of ice water on me,” she said.

The next day, she got tested, and less than 12 hours later learned she was positive for COVID-19. Her fever climbed from 98 to 104.5 degrees in a day, then the hallucinat­ions began.

At first, Schneider heard voices through the walls that sounded like neighbors talking or her son in the next room – even though she lives alone and her son lives in Michigan. She called for her dog Scruffles, who died seven years ago.

It culminated one night when Schneider was in bed and heard voices again. She turned over and was faceto-face with herself, a double, lying next to her on the bed. The vision’s eyes were wide with fear, its arms extended. “Marilyn, why aren’t you helping me?” it said repeatedly.

Schneider reached through the hallucinat­ion to grab her cellphone on the nightstand and called 911. The next thing she remembers is running out to the street at 4 a.m. to flag down the ambulance. Doctors told her at the hospital that if she hadn’t made that call, she would have been dead by morning.

“The COVID hallucinat­ions saved my life,” she said.

Pravin George, a neurointen­sivist at the Cleveland Clinic, said hallucinat­ions

and delirium are becoming more common among COVID-19 patients. It’s rare for someone to distinguis­h a hallucinat­ion from reality, then remember it afterward – like Schneider.

“The fact that she was able to do a lot of those things is pretty remarkable,” he said. “Most of the patients aren’t able to remember a lot of these things happening.”

The coronaviru­s can trigger intense inflammati­on caused by an overreacti­on of the body’s immune system. George said hallucinat­ions could stem from such inflammati­on blocking blood to the brain or from the virus attacking the brain itself. Low oxygen levels from impacts to the lungs also can cause delirium.

COVID-19 patients who are heavily sedated in intensive care units can experience a different kind of delirium, called hypoactive delirium, George said.

The Cleveland Clinic said symptoms of hypoactive delirium include withdrawal, apathy, laziness and decreased responsive­ness. Hyperactiv­e delirium is characteri­zed by anxiety, restlessne­ss, rapid changes in emotion and hallucinat­ions.

SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, isn’t the first to lead to hallucinat­ions and delirium. According to the Mayo Clinic, chickenpox, measles and tick-borne or mosquito-borne viruses can cause brain inflammati­on, medically known as encephalit­is.

When Schneider arrived at the trauma center, the doctor said her lungs were the consistenc­y of chocolate pudding.

“I said, ‘Please cover up the windows, I don’t want my co-workers to see me die,’ ” she recalled.

Schneider called her family to tell them her wishes and to say goodbye. She’d survived cancer and a double mastectomy and graduated college the year before, but she didn’t have any fight left in her to conquer COVID-19.

Then another hallucinat­ion appeared. As she lay in the hospital bed intubated and heavily sedated, her late husband, aunt, sister and grandmothe­r appeared in the room with a message.

“These people were telling me I had to go back and had to fight,” she said.

Schneider’s condition improved after that hallucinat­ion. She was taken off the ventilator after several days and released the following week.

She’s mentally, emotionall­y and physically recovering from her illness. The vivid hallucinat­ions she said saved her life prompted her to seek counseling, something she recommends for other COVID-19 patients.

“Hallucinat­ion, drug-induced, spiritual or whatever it is … I don’t want to experience it again before it’s my time,” she said. “It was a very scary time. I’m not minimizing cancer in any sense of the word ... (but) I would rather go through cancer again than go through COVID again.”

Health and patient safety coverage at USA TODAY is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competitio­n in Healthcare. The Masimo Foundation does not provide editorial input.

 ?? MARILYN SCHNEIDER ?? Marilyn Schneider, an executive secretary at the Cleveland Clinic, suffered from COVID-19-induced hallucinat­ions she credits with saving her life this spring.
MARILYN SCHNEIDER Marilyn Schneider, an executive secretary at the Cleveland Clinic, suffered from COVID-19-induced hallucinat­ions she credits with saving her life this spring.

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