National Post (National Edition)

Pregnant doctor navigates COVID fight

LOS ANGELES

- KRISTINA COOKE AND LUCY NICHOLSON

LOS ANGELES a coronaviru­s patient onto a ventilator to help him to breathe, Dr. Zafia Anklesaria noted to herself that her baby never kicked during emergency procedures.

It was not until she was back in her office and had removed most of her protective equipment that he made his presence known.

Anklesaria is seven months pregnant with her first child. The 35-year-old works as a co-director of the intensive care unit at CommonSpir­it’s Dignity Health California Hospital Medical Center, a downtown Los Angeles hospital that mostly serves lower-income Hispanic and African-American population­s.

The hospital’s 22-bed COVID-19 intensive care unit has been at or close to capacity since the end of March. Some nurses are pulling 24-hour shifts to care for the high number of patients in critical condition, she said.

“The socio-economic class that we serve, people tend to live in close quarters. They don’t really have the privilege of good social distancing, and they are tending to get more infected as a result,” Anklesaria said.

People living in the highest poverty areas of Los Angeles county are dying of COVID-19 at more than twice the rate of those in the wealthiest areas, according to data from the county’s department for public health.

Anklesaria’s 12-hour shift starts at 7 a.m. She works four days a week on average in the ICU and another one to two days doing pulmonary consultati­ons with patients.

After getting an update from the night shift she begins her rounds. Nurses check on her regularly, making sure she is hydrated, properly protected and takes breaks to eat.

“I don’t think I could do this job pregnant without their help,” Anklesaria said. She has been lucky to have an easy pregnancy and the baby has been “really well behaved.”

“You’ve allowed your mom to do her job very well,” she said to her belly.

There are physical limitation­s: she is finding it harder to stay on her feet for long periods of time and often comes home with backache.

One May morning she had good news — one of the hospital’s first COVID-19 patients, a man who was almost four weeks on the ventilator, was ready to have his tracheosto­my tube removed.

“Yay, you did it, you are officially liberated!” she told 65-year old Vicente Arredondo as she removed the tube.

When she returned home, exhausted, her husband Aryan Jafari, 30, held back the dog as she dashed to the shower. She initially brought up the possibilit­y of isolating herself from him, but he wouldn’t hear of it.

He worries about her and the baby, but “he is fortunatel­y understand­ing of me wanting to and needing to work,” she said. “This is a job we sign up for. If we don’t do it, who’s going to do it?”

 ?? LUCY NICHOLSON / REUTERS ?? Dr. Zafia Anklesaria removes a tracheosto­my tube from COVID-19 patient Vicente Arredondo this month in the intensive care unit at the hospital
where she works in Los Angeles. “Yay, you did it, you are officially liberated!” Anklesaria said to Arredondo after she removed the tube.
LUCY NICHOLSON / REUTERS Dr. Zafia Anklesaria removes a tracheosto­my tube from COVID-19 patient Vicente Arredondo this month in the intensive care unit at the hospital where she works in Los Angeles. “Yay, you did it, you are officially liberated!” Anklesaria said to Arredondo after she removed the tube.

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