Daily Express

We try everything better...but nothing To make patients seems to work

- By Michael Knowles

EXHAUSTED doctors yesterday told of the heartbreak­ing toll of the battle against Covid-19.

Medics said they are “throwing everything” at patients to help them recover from the horrific virus, but said “it just doesn’t seem to be working”.

Staff at Milton Keynes University Hospital warned more people are dying from coronaviru­s as fewer of the sickest patients are responding to treatment.

One in 10 major hospital trusts had no spare adult critical care beds last week, according to NHS England data.

Sir Patrick Vallance, the Government’s chief scientific adviser, has warned hospitals are like “war zones” amid rising numbers of virus patients.

Some 15 out of 140 acute trusts reported 100 per cent occupancy of all “open” beds each day from January 11 to 17.

Wassim Shamsuddin, clinical director for anaesthesi­a and intensive care at Milton Keynes, said: “This time around, what we’re finding is that patients aren’t faring as well if they need to be invasively ventilated. Our mortality probably in the first wave for patients coming to intensive care was around 40 per cent. This time around we find that the mortality is about 80 per cent.

“At the moment we’re just all keeping our heads down and just getting on with it.

“Intensive care hospitals are meant to be a place where we treat patients and make them better.

“The difficulty here is that even though we try our best and we throw everything at the patients, it just doesn’t seem to be working.”

Dr Shamsuddin said every Covid

patient in the hospital now automatica­lly receives the drugs Remdesivir and Dexamethas­one after they were found to be effective.

The youngest person being ventilated at the hospital is just 28, staff said.

The doctors and nurses at Milton Keynes University Hospital said they are now battling with the strain of exhaustion and loss.

Pictures taken inside the hospital show staff hard at work, as they face the pressure of the mortality rate doubling.

Hospital staff try and keep moral high. A temporary eating area has been arranged, and uplifting messages are written on an “inspiratio­n wall” to keep spirits high.

A bell is even rung to notify staff of meal times.

Medics have been drafted in from other wards to plug gaps in the units supporting Covid patients.

Joe Harrison, chief executive of Milton Keynes University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, said the hospital had seen more than twice the number of patients in the second wave than the first, and currently had 186 patients with Covid. He

said: “We believe that over the next week or so, we’re going to continue to see real pressures in our critical care unit.

“And then hopefully we will turn the corner and things will start to improve.”

Joy Halliday, a consultant in intensive care and acute medicine, is in charge of a high-dependency unit for Covid.

She said that with visits curtailed, the doctors and nurses were also supporting patients emotionall­y.

She added: “I can only just imagine how difficult that is for family at the end of the telephone to be told that their loved one is getting worse, or they’re agitated or their oxygen levels are dropping.

“It’s difficult for us to see and it’s even more difficult for them.”

Ms Halliday and other staff have forged close bonds with the patients, despite having to wear full PPE and being forced to interact from behind masks and visors.

Patient Geoffrey Winter, 70, said of the high-dependency unit: “It’s draining. It’s draining mentally.

“It’s difficult to keep going on a day-to-day basis for staff, just to see death in, death out, every day.” Stephen Marshall, 68, added: “I’m on oxygen all the time now. I seem to be holding my own at the moment, so touch wood.”

The governing body of the Bedfordshi­re, Luton and Milton Keynes clinical commission­ing group said in a statement: “We are now at the point where 50 per cent of the patients across our hospitals are Covid positive.

“It’s having a huge impact on human lives, including our loved ones, and it’s putting huge strain on our clinicians and health and social care staff who are desperate to provide the best quality service.” Meanwhile, Sir Patrick said reports that the lockdown could be lifted early were “insanity”.

He said: “You go for a walk in the park or something, life looks normal. “You go to a hospital – some look like a war zone at the moment. This is a very bad moment.” physically.

It’s draining

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 ??  ?? Life on the frontline... staff take a break in a temporary additional eating area at Milton Keynes University Hospital, left. A bell is rung to notify all the medics working on a Covid ward of meal times, right, at the busy hospital
Life on the frontline... staff take a break in a temporary additional eating area at Milton Keynes University Hospital, left. A bell is rung to notify all the medics working on a Covid ward of meal times, right, at the busy hospital
 ??  ?? Ward insight... nurses monitor Covid patients
Ward insight... nurses monitor Covid patients
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 ?? Pictures: TOBY MELVILLE/REUTERS ?? Bond...consultant Joy Halliday speaks to patient Stephen Marshall, 68
Pictures: TOBY MELVILLE/REUTERS Bond...consultant Joy Halliday speaks to patient Stephen Marshall, 68
 ??  ?? Uplifting...the staff’s own ‘inspiratio­n wall’ and, below, a nurse monitors Covid patient Victorita Andries, 50
Uplifting...the staff’s own ‘inspiratio­n wall’ and, below, a nurse monitors Covid patient Victorita Andries, 50
 ??  ?? Chief executive... Joe Harrison
Chief executive... Joe Harrison

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