Los Angeles Times

Frustratio­n builds as unvaccinat­ed fill ICUs

Doctors and nurses tire of seeing patients — nearly all of them not fully immunized — lose their lives to COVID

- By Brittny Mejia

COLTON — Nine patients awaited their fates in an intensive care unit at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in the Inland Empire.

The youngest was 26, the oldest 66. Four of them had already been intubated, a last-ditch effort to save their lives. Inside fourth-floor rooms bare of decor, each lay alone in the dark, f lat on their belly and sedated because the pain of the tube running down their throat would be too great otherwise.

The number of COVID-19 patients in the unit on Wednesday morning was about double that of a couple of weeks ago. But this was a different kind of surge from last winter, when the hospital saw well over 100 COVID patients at its peak and had to create a makeshift ICU out of the post-anesthesia care unit.

Over the last seven days, the public hospital, which is run by San Bernardino County, has averaged 20 COVID-positive patients.

The number of hospitaliz­ations was undeniably not as bleak as it

was last winter, but there was a sim

mering frustratio­n. All of the ICU patients, every single one, was unvaccinat­ed.

“It’s definitely frustratin­g, especially when now the vaccine makes it almost preventabl­e to be in this state,” said charge nurse Beth Koelliker, gesturing at the rooms behind her. On a recent Sunday, three people died.

The needlessne­ss of it all, demoralizi­ng.

“Patients are still dying at an alarming rate, all unvaccinat­ed,” she said. “They haven’t stopped dying for two years. It’s hard to deal with that for so long.”

With the upcoming holidays and officials preparing for the spread of the highly infectious Omicron variant, healthcare workers worry about what’s coming. Already, Riverside and San Bernardino counties have seen a higher rate of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations than other areas of Southern California.

In San Bernardino County, only 59% of residents of all ages have received at least one dose of vaccine. The mortality rate among the unvaccinat­ed in the county is nearly 10 times higher than for those who are fully vaccinated, according to county data.

“It is a wake-up call for those still remaining unvaccinat­ed, or those who have not yet gotten their boosters who are eligible to do so,” said Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious disease expert at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. “The severe hospitaliz­ations and deaths that are occurring now are virtually all preventabl­e, had people simply gotten the vaccine.”

There were 25 COVID patients scattered throughout the Colton hospital on Wednesday. Of those, the three who were known to be fully vaccinated were asymptomat­ic, 16 were unvaccinat­ed, one was partially vaccinated and the status of five was unknown. Many of them were were housed on the fourth floor.

In 4 North ICU, more than 70 stockings were strung up along the windows on the recent Wednesday. The names of each staff member on the unit were printed at the top, above penguins, presents or snowflakes.

Nearby stood the tree that Zorina Hernandez, the critical care unit manager, had ordered on Amazon. Koelliker, a registered nurse, had come in an extra day to help festoon it with bows, tinsel, and red, green and gold ornaments.

Koelliker brought cupcakes and holiday headbands to try to keep the mood light.

She wore a sweater decorated with snowflakes, bells, a Santa hat and a thermomete­r that read 36.5 (in Celsius). It was her “ugly sweater.”

On the walls between rooms hung miniature Christmas trees and red globes that read “Merry Christmas.” The festive spirit belied the grim circumstan­ces for patients inside.

One woman had been on a ventilator for close to two weeks and probably wouldn’t be able to come off. Hospital staff had begun discussing palliative care with her family. The hospital allows visitation for COVID patients at end of life, but family members are allowed only outside the room.

“That’s really hard for family to deal with, not being able to hold their loved one’s hand,” Koelliker said.

The 66-year-old man in the next room had recently been admitted. He was on high-flow oxygen but was close to the threshold of requiring intubation. The same was true of a woman down the hall.

As Koelliker ran through the ages of each patient — in their 60s, 50s, 40s and 20s — it illustrate­d another trend that healthcare workers in the county have seen in the last six months: Patients are younger than they were at the beginning of the pandemic.

The younger they are, Koelliker said, the more likely that there are underlying diseases involved. It was rare, she said, to see a young patient “who doesn’t have other health issues going on.”

Shortly before 9 a.m., nurses — one for every two patients — administer­ed morning medication­s and conducted their assessment­s. They wore yellow isolation gowns, white-andgray shoe covers and respirator­y helmets.

When beeping sounded from a room, signaling that a patient’s oxygen had dropped to 84, Koelliker peeked inside. The 44-yearold woman was not in respirator­y distress and had probably just finished eating, causing the drop.

Still, Koelliker cracked the door to ask, “Doing OK?” The woman, who was not yet intubated, signaled that she was.

Right before Thanksgivi­ng, Hernandez said, the hospital went 48 hours with no COVID patients in the ICU. After the holiday, “the numbers just started to climb,” the unit manager added.

Asked whether they were fearful of more cases coming, Koelliker said, “I know it’s coming. The winter is here.”

“We’re preparing for the worst but expecting better,” said Hernandez, a registered nurse.

Around 10 a.m., Dr. Curtis Converse, an attending pulmonary critical care intensivis­t, made the rounds of his patients. He pulled up the chest X-ray of a patient in her 40s.

There were no major changes in her cloudy chest film, he told the staff members gathered outside.

“The devastatio­n on the lungs is pretty intense,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely, this patient is pretty young, she’s in mid-adulthood. Just very, very sick.”

Inside the room, only the top of the woman’s head was visible over a teal blanket. She lay face down, on her belly. Patients are at times kept on their bellies for 16 hours a day to help their lungs get more oxygen, Converse said. They had breathing tubes and another to urinate through, along with IVs in jugular veins and in arteries.

“Critical illness with COVID is not comfortabl­e,” Converse said.

Working in the ICU, Koelliker said, is a “balance act of keeping yourself rested, keeping your mental space open.” Koelliker had taken up hiking this year as a form of self-care.

On the first hike she took in January, she took a big breath of fresh mountain air and started to cry.

“Because I knew there were people here who couldn’t breathe or who had just died that morning or that night before, and you just feel so guilty,” she said.

Koelliker recalled the patients who had died. One was a newlywed married a week prior. There was a mother and son. Another with a newborn.

The three who died Sunday had all been unvaccinat­ed. By the time they

reached the ICU, it was too late for the vaccine to offer them any hope.

Although some patients voice regret about not being vaccinated, others are adamant that they still won’t do so, Koelliker said.

She expressed frustratio­n that members of her

own family have also resisted being vaccinated.

“I can see it here with my own eyes,” Koelliker said. “We’re still having patients die on us.”

“If they could see what we see,” Hernandez said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? DR. OLIVIA MA, left, and Dr. David Wong treat a COVID patient in an intensive care unit at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in Colton. This is a different kind of surge from last winter.
Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times DR. OLIVIA MA, left, and Dr. David Wong treat a COVID patient in an intensive care unit at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in Colton. This is a different kind of surge from last winter.
 ?? ?? “PATIENTS are still dying at an alarming rate, all unvaccinat­ed,” said Beth Koelliker, a charge nurse at Arrowhead. “They haven’t stopped dying for two years. It’s hard to deal with that for so long.”
“PATIENTS are still dying at an alarming rate, all unvaccinat­ed,” said Beth Koelliker, a charge nurse at Arrowhead. “They haven’t stopped dying for two years. It’s hard to deal with that for so long.”
 ?? ?? DR. CURTIS CONVERSE, center, an attending pulmonary critical care intensivis­t, confers with nurses. He knows well the damage COVID can do to lungs.
DR. CURTIS CONVERSE, center, an attending pulmonary critical care intensivis­t, confers with nurses. He knows well the damage COVID can do to lungs.
 ?? Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? DANIEL OCAMPO, a registered nurse at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center, checks medication­s delivered by intravenou­s pumps to a COVID-19 patient. In San Bernardino County, only 59% of residents of all ages have received at least one dose of vaccine.
Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times DANIEL OCAMPO, a registered nurse at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center, checks medication­s delivered by intravenou­s pumps to a COVID-19 patient. In San Bernardino County, only 59% of residents of all ages have received at least one dose of vaccine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States