South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

European hospitals in juggling act

Pandemic resulted in surgical backlogs now being cleared

- By John Leicester

PARIS— Chatting before they go under the knife, the two women picture their lives after surgery. Caroline Erganian hopes to be rid of her pain. Lolita Andela imagines being able to be active with her kids.

After multiple false starts, they scarcely dare believe that their Paris hospital, no longer monopolize­d by COVID-19 patients, is once again able to perform their intestinal tucks to treat chronic obesity. When the pandemic was burning through France’s health system, the women’s surgeries were repeatedly pushed back. But after months of waiting, their turn has now come.

Lyingona gurney, ready to be wheeled into the operating room, Erganian, aretiree, tells the surgeon: “I’m doing this surgery to have a better life. So I’m enthusiast­ic, not a bit scared.”

“A new start,” replies the surgeon, Lara Ri be iro Par en ti, thrilled to be back at work with her scalpel .“This is what we know best and what we enjoy doing. It’s a renewal, a newstart, forus, too.”

But many thousands of others in France and other European countries hardest-hit by the pandemic are still waiting for medical procedures that could change their lives and improve their health, but which were deemed nonessenti­al when the virus ripped through hospitals.

To prevent the collapse of public health systems, their decks were cleared. People who had been scheduled for joint replacemen­ts to free them from pain, for cataract removals to defog their sight, for cancer checks, and myriad other life-improving and even potentiall­y life-saving procedures, were told to stay home as staving off COVID-19 took priority.

At the Bichat Hospital in Paris, one of the French capital’s largest with 900 beds, wards fell silent as resources were poured into critical care units in the basement.

But doctors are now better able to treat virus patients and better equipped for the double challenge of fighting COVID-19 while also doing other medicine. With France’s most recent virus spike now stabilized, Bichat is using the lull to tackle the back log of surgeries. An Associated Press team spent two days this month with its staff, seeing how they are recovering from virus surges that left more than 56,000 dead in France.

Bichat was the first hospital outside Asia to report a

COVID-19 death, back in February, and was turned upside down when the pandemic struck with full force in March. Makeshift plastic screens were erected to stop contaminat­ion spreading, held up with duct tape and bits of wood. Operating rooms and a recovery room the size of a tennis court were among spaces hastily converted for floods of sick people, who were plugged into ventilator­s, one next to theother.

“It was cataclysmi­c,” recalls Simon Msika, the head of digestive surgery whose unit was among those that emptied.

Admissions for COVID

19 aside, hospitaliz­ations across France plunged, with

2 million fewer hospital stays from March to July compared to the same period of 2019, the French Hospitals Federation says. There were half as many kidney transplant­s from March to September, according to the federation. Its statistici­ans estimate that the number of patients waiting for postponed procedures has swelled by hundreds of thousands.

Neighborin­g Spain was battling long waiting lists for non-urgent surgeries even before the virus caused more than 46,000 deaths there. Public health data shows that in the first half of 2020, surgeries plunged by more than a third year-on-year.

In Portugal, almost 100,000 surgeries had been postponed by October. And the associatio­n of hospital surgeons in Italy says more than 600,000 operations have been canceled there ,50,000 of them for cancer.

Delays are more than mere inconvenie­nces for patients. Erganian weighed

308 pounds before surgery; An dela was 293 pounds. Both were terrified of becoming infected by the virus, acutely aware that obesity puts them at greater risk of dying from COVID-19. Other than for work and groceries, Andela says she barely left the house. Erganian says she lived in “monstrous fear.”

Both gained weight in lockdown. An del a wept when her nutritioni­st weighed her.

Erganian, 58, hopes to shed more than a third of her weight as a result of having a large part of her stomach cut out and be free of knee and back pain— and of her cane. She prayed in the final weeks that her phone wouldn’t ring with news of another delay.

“In a European country as developed as France, I find it abnormal that surgeries that should have been done couldn’t be carried out because of COVID,” she says. “We should not be choosing between one sick person and another.”

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