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Beirut doctors in losing battle to save Covid patients in their overwhelme­d hospital

- GARETH BROWNE

The ventilator beeps make for an eerie soundtrack in a Beirut intensive care unit. It is a deadly melody, interrupte­d only by the rustling of protective suits.

A group of nurses, dressed head to toe in safety clothing, peer through the glass at an unconsciou­s woman.

This is not a typical Covid-19 patient.

At 25, Fatima – whose name has been changed – is young. She was healthy, too.

Yet the virus appeared to pounce on one vulnerabil­ity – her pregnancy.

“It’s something we are seeing more of now,” says Hussein Al Khazim, 25, a registered nurse on the unit.

“We have several cases of pregnant women where a C section or abortion has been carried out because of Covid-19.

“Some patients have had abortions. Sometimes they recover, but the effects are the same. The suffering continues, even after they are Covid-19 negative.”

An exhausted Mr Al Khazim moves to wipe his brow before rememberin­g to resist touching his face. Even the most innocent scratch might spread the virus.

“Unfortunat­ely, she lost the baby. It was two days ago,” he says.

This month, Lebanon repeatedly registered record coronaviru­s case. These are the devastatin­g ramificati­ons of relaxing restrictio­ns during the holiday period, staff at Rafik Hariri University Hospital say.

Now, the country’s healthcare system is at breaking point. Hospitals are full and critical supplies of necessitie­s such as oxygen are running low.

With the record number of cases came record deaths – 44 were reported on Friday. The number of daily deaths from the virus is now 13 times what it was in July.

In a sign of how deep in the throes of a public health calamity this country is, caretaker Health Minister Hamad

Hasan was admitted to hospital with the virus on Thursday.

Dr Oussayma El Dbouni, an infectious diseases specialist at the hospital, said that although the crisis is overwhelmi­ng, it was entirely predictabl­e.

“The normal population didn’t take any precaution­s. These numbers are a result of what happened two weeks ago – we were expecting this,” she says, referring to the loosening of restrictio­ns over the festive period.

“We don’t have enough beds. It’s always full. Patients sometimes wait in the ER for a day to get a space on the floor. We are in a very bad situation right now and we don’t know where we are going.”

As the minister charged with leading the government response to the pandemic focuses

on his personal battle against the virus, hundreds of patients are fighting for their lives in ICUs across the country.

Staff say that in the past year only 20 per cent of coronaviru­s patients admitted to this ICU have made it out alive.

One nurse, Abdullah Khatabi, says he can count the number of patients who made it off the ward in the past year on two hands.

For Fatima, and the hundreds of others admitted to ICUs across Lebanon, the odds of survival are slim.

Nurses call the ward’s ventilator­s the “kiss of death”, because even though the machines may keep patients alive long enough to fight off the virus, the side effects of longterm intubation can be crippling.

A surge in case numbers early this month prompted a flustered response from the authoritie­s.

There was panic-buying in supermarke­ts before a lockdown was introduced on Thursday. A 24-hour curfew is in place and

people must seek permission to leave their homes.

Hospital administra­tors have scrambled to increase ICU capacity with some success, but one hospital said it was isolating and treating Covid-19 patients in the car park.

Terese Ghobar, a nurse with 20 years of experience, was sent to oversee infection control on the ward after Lebanon’s first coronaviru­s case was detected on February 21 last year.

A patient travelled from Iran, the virus their invisible hand luggage.

Ms Ghobar says the squeeze on resources, particular­ly ICU beds, is forcing hospital staff to make agonising decisions.

“It’s the most difficult part. Who do I put on the ventilator? If I have one respirator, who do I put on it? The young man? Or the sick man? Every day we are making those decisions,” she says.

The ward is made up of 10 bays, closed off by sliding glass doors. The bays surround a central hall, where there is nothing but essential equipment. Yet the hall is a stifling pot of exhaustion and frustratio­n.

The masks and suits are suffocatin­g, blocking not just the virus, but even the most basic form of human interactio­n. Reassuring smiles are hidden, supportive hugs strictly forbidden.

Much of the staff, some of them still inexperien­ced, have been working for the past year without much rest.

Their proximity to the virus meant huge personal sacrifices were made.

They have forgone seeing their families for months. Social lives are a distant memory.

“My father is bedridden; my mother is sick. I’m afraid to visit them,” Ms Ghobar says.

Frustratio­n is also building with the Lebanese public, who medics say do not appear to take the virus seriously.

Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces recorded 13,167 breaches of safety measures on Wednesday, on the eve of stricter rules – all despite warnings about the unfolding crisis.

“Stay in the house. From all our hearts. Please help us. We’re so tired. Psychologi­cally, physically, we’re very tired,” Ms Ghobar says.

As for those who might be tempted to break the lockdown, Mr Al Khazim has one message.

“I wish they would spend one shift, or half a shift, in intensive care – then they can see the damage of their actions,” he said.

But despite the frustratio­n and emotions, there are slivers of hope.

A woman wakes up after 10 days on a ventilator.

Delirious from the anaestheti­c, she musters a smile, and waves to a line of nurses through the glass of her bay.

She is expected to be released from the ICU today. She is one of the 20 per cent.

The population didn’t take any precaution­s. These numbers are a result of what happened two weeks ago

OUSSAYMA EL DBOUNI Doctor

 ?? Tom Nicholson for The National ?? Dr Oussayma El Dbouni, a specialist at Rafik Hariri University Hospital, says the crisis was predictabl­e
Tom Nicholson for The National Dr Oussayma El Dbouni, a specialist at Rafik Hariri University Hospital, says the crisis was predictabl­e

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