The Independent on Saturday

DAILY TOLL OF DEATH

It can’t be ‘back to normal’ after plateau

- BRIAN MAHONEY and JOHN MINCHILLO

YONKERS, (New York state): A nurse furiously pushes down on a man’s chest as five other staff in full protective gear surround the patient’s bed.

Suddenly, one throws up his arms and steps backward.

“OK, move! Everybody move!” are the instructio­ns.

Moments after they back away, the patient’s heart is shocked, his arm spasms and he shakes on the bed. Soon after, he is placed on a ventilator. He has been saved for now.

Many more at Saint Joseph’s Medical Centre have not.

“It’s been a nightmare. We have a volume of sick people like you can’t believe. In one shift, I pronounced six people dead,” said Dr Anthony Leno, the hospital’s director of emergency medicine, who on average pronounces one dead in a 10-12 hour shift.

The Yonkers hospital, which sits near the Bronx border and serves one of the poorest sections of Westcheste­r County’s largest city, has been besieged by the coronaviru­s.

Half of the 280 staff members who were tested for the disease were positive with another 25 to 30 still awaiting results, according to Dean Civitello, the vice-president for human resources.

The Associated Press was granted access to the facility’s emergency room, which at one point earlier in the pandemic had 28 patients waiting to be treated and ambulances lined up outside with more, said Dr James Neuendorf, Saint Joseph’s medical director.

Staff from other areas of the hospital were redeployed to manage patients and additional treatment areas were set up to augment the hospital’s 194 acute-care beds.

The adjustment­s meant “we were able to take care of a large number of patients well above our numbers that we normally see on a daily basis.”

More than 900 have died in Westcheste­r, which had an early outbreak in neighbouri­ng New Rochelle in March before Yonkers became a hot spot. At Saint Joseph’s, coronaviru­s-related symptoms accounted for more than 85% of all admissions for nearly four weeks from March 20 to April 19.

Officials at the hospital knew the pandemic was going to crush them.

One particular challenge is that large families frequently live together in small homes, making it difficult to isolate sick people.

And, Leno noted, there have been few effective therapies other than isolation.

“We’ve had many family members and groups, and we’ve even had people from the same family who have died within days of each other.”

The community was hit so hard that a tent was erected outside the hospital on March 19 to accommodat­e the rush of people seeking to be tested.

In the first few days it was up, 150 to 175 people were examined each day to determine who should be tested, according to Catherine Hopkins, Saint Joseph’s director of school health and community relations.

Even some in the area who may otherwise be reluctant to seek medical care, fearing the loss of pay or in some cases deportatio­n, showed up after seeing the effects of the coronaviru­s.

“People are afraid,” Hopkins said. “They’re scared. Their relatives, their friends are dying.”

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in two to three weeks.

But for some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness and lead to death.

Beyond the unpreceden­ted medical challenges, the outbreak caused financial hardships for the Catholic hospital that has served Yonkers since 1888.

Beds and equipment had to be bought or rented to meet governor Andrew Cuomo’s mandate for hospitals to increase their capacity, and personal protective equipment had to be purchased at much higher costs as normal suppliers ran out.

“There’s a lot of people gouging out there. A mask that cost 50 cents before are costing $7 (R133), $8 each. Gowns that would cost 50 cents as well, are $7 each. Protective shields that were $1.25, people looking for 25 bucks a pop,” said Frank Hagan, Saint Joseph’s chief financial officer. “So, cost is a significan­t issue.”

As is the morale of the staff, who fear for their own health, are juggling responsibi­lities when their colleagues are ill and are bombarded, even more than usual, with death and disease.

“It is tiring. It is stressful,” said chief nursing officer Margaret Cusumano, who has been back about three weeks after she had tested positive.

“You’re watching people be sick. You’re watching people succumb to the disease. It weighs on you mentally, physically.”

Fewer patients are coming to Saint Joseph’s now. Though there’s still a steady stream of patients wearing masks being wheeled into the ER every day, the staff is optimistic that the worst is over.

But there is also the fear that people will rush too quickly back to their lives, potentiall­y triggering another flurry of infections.

“They hear we’re over the plateau and they think, ‘OK, it’s business as usual’,” Hopkins said. “It’s not. It can’t be.”

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 ?? | AP ?? DR ANTHONY Leno, the director of emergency medicine, pauses at the end of his shift on Monday at St Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, New York state. The hospital has been battling to save lives during the pandemic.
| AP DR ANTHONY Leno, the director of emergency medicine, pauses at the end of his shift on Monday at St Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, New York state. The hospital has been battling to save lives during the pandemic.
 ?? AP ?? NURSES and doctors clear themselves before de-fibrillati­ng a patient who tested positive for Covid-19 and suddenly went ‘Code 99,’ or into cardiac arrest, after appearing stable moments before at St Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, New York state. |
AP NURSES and doctors clear themselves before de-fibrillati­ng a patient who tested positive for Covid-19 and suddenly went ‘Code 99,’ or into cardiac arrest, after appearing stable moments before at St Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, New York state. |
 ?? AP ?? NURSES and doctors perform CPR on a patient with Covid-19 who went into cardiac arrest at St Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, New York state, this week. The emergency room team successful­ly revived the patient. |
AP NURSES and doctors perform CPR on a patient with Covid-19 who went into cardiac arrest at St Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, New York state, this week. The emergency room team successful­ly revived the patient. |

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