South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Meet the doctor who fought coronaviru­s while pregnant

- By Yvonne Villarreal Los Angeles Times

Early in a special episode of Netflix’s medical docuseries “Lenox Hill,” Dr. Mirtha Macri is beginning yet another shift in the emergency department at Lenox Health, a division of Manhattan’s Lenox Hill Hospital, when she pauses hesitantly in a corridor. She asks a wandering coworker whether the empty room she’s about to enter has been cleaned so she can run in and get a surgical gown.

It’s early March. “The way I feel right now is that I trained my whole life for this,” Macri tells the camera. “It’s not very often that a pandemic happens during your career in emergency medicine. … I feel like it’s my duty, I feel a little obligated to be here. But at the same time, you know, I don’t want to be exposed because of (my)

Dr. Mirtha Macri in “Lenox Hill.”

pregnancy.”

“Lenox Hill” launched in June and follows the lives of four doctors — including Macri — as they navigate the tightrope of their work and profession­al lives.

But in a special episode, titled “Pandemic,” cameras return to document the doctors as they maneuver through the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak in New York City, then the U.S. hot spot of the virus, just as many Americans were beginning to selfisolat­e at home.

Directed and produced by Adi Barash and Ruthie Shatz, “Lenox Hill” initially shot last year from April through November, with a small crew of four (including Barash and Shatz). Filming for the COVID special began in early March and continued through the end of May, with just Barash shooting.

Viewers of the series have come to know Macri as the dedicated emergency room physician who was itching to get back to treating patients after the birth of her son, Joaquin. When viewers reunite with her in the special episode, she’s pregnant with her second child and trying to make sense of the still-mysterious virus.

“To be honest, I was feeling anxious,” Macri said. “There was definitely a lot of fear. At the same time, we wanted to understand and grasp as much informatio­n as we could because we didn’t know enough. We knew from what was happening in other countries, but it just came at us like a tsunami.”

The episode, which runs roughly 30 minutes, captures the whirlwind of uncertaint­y and the stress on resources (mask shortages, staffing issues) caused by the pandemic. The toll on Macri is palpable — she shares that she’s getting only two to three hours of sleep a night because of the pressure and anxiety of work and the growing risk faced by staffers. At one point, she breaks down in her car, wiping back tears.

Macri said there were many serious conversati­ons with her husband and family about whether she should continue working in a high-risk environmen­t while pregnant. To reduce the possibilit­y of potentiall­y spreading the virus, Macri’s husband and their son ultimately moved in with her parents.

“My husband was very scared that the rest of the family could get exposed, including our son and our unborn baby,” Macri said. “I had to work through that because my first instinct is to say: I trained for this and I want to be on the front line for this . ... So that was a huge struggle for me personally. It caused more anxiety and fear than the actual management of the virus.”

Macri is currently treating patients via virtual consultati­ons. She says she’ll work until she gives birth. She recently managed to find time to view the original first eight episodes of “Lenox Hill” and said they felt almost like period pieces.

“I felt sad,” Macri said. “It was like, ‘Oh wow, that was before COVID.’ I wish I could just touch a patient’s hand or walk into their room freely like that again, and I don’t know when it will ever get back to that. Maybe years.”

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