The Columbus Dispatch

Some hospitals require COVID vaccinatio­n for employees

- Contact Dr. Roach at Toyourgood­health@med.cornell.edu or 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803

Dear Dr. Roach: Why aren’t the hospitals nationwide mandating all personnel be COVID vaccinated? I am getting conflictin­g informatio­n. Don’t you think the first-line people treating the ill, whether it is to check a patient in to the hospital or a nurse, should have their vaccine in order to work in the hospital?

— K.W.

More and more hospitals and health systems require proof of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n for all employees who have contact with patients, and I absolutely agree with this. Vaccines protect the individual, so I think everyone who can get the vaccine should. But health care workers have a special responsibi­lity to protect their patients, and even if they don’t want the vaccine for themselves, they are ethically obligated to get the vaccine in order not to infect their patients.

Protecting our patients, selves, colleagues, family and community is paramount. Part of being a health care profession­al is putting your patients’ needs above your own.

Dear Dr. Roach: My systolic blood pressure is high (155), and my pulse is low (55). If I take blood pressure medicine to lower my systolic pressure, will that lower my pulse and create a bigger problem?

— A.K.D.

Although some blood pressure medicines do slow down the pulse, most doctors would avoid using them in a person who already has a pulse on the slow side. While 55 is not dangerous, it could drop further with a beta blocker or some calcium channel blockers, which slow down the heart and lower blood pressure.

If your diastolic pressure is normal, then you have what is called “isolated systolic hypertensi­on,” and in many cases the best blood pressure medicine to use is a diuretic such as hydrochlor­othiazide or chlorthali­done. These have been shown to reduce the risk of stroke better than other blood pressure medicines in older people with isolated systolic hypertensi­on, and they do not lower the pulse rate.

Choosing a blood pressure medicine should take into account a person’s underlying medical conditions, not only to avoid side effects and toxicities, but hopefully to get additional benefits from one medicine.

Dear Dr. Roach: I would like to know more about dropsy. I can’t take water pills because of hard stools.

— R.R.C.

Dropsy is a very old name for swelling, or edema, from the Greek word for water. The term is most often used to describe the feet swelling common in congestive heart failure.

Diuretics (“water pills”) are commonly used for people with congestive heart failure resulting from a variety of conditions, but do not always have to be used.

Other classes of medicines are effective not only at improving symptoms, but also in reducing the risk of death due to heart failure, which diuretics do not do.

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