Pandemic Perspectives

Page 22

NYC Paramedic Describes Holding ‘Ad Hoc Wake’ in Ambulance for Coronavirus Victim; ‘I’ve Never Seen so Many People Die in One Shift’ George W. Contreras, M.E.P., M.P.H., M.S., CEM, FAcEM

So on this street corner in New York City, in the middle of the night, I decided to allow the family to say their final goodbyes right there in the back of the ambulance. I never thought my ambulance would become an ad hoc funeral home and be the site for a wake in the middle of the night. It doesn’t offer any closure. It made me well up. A wave of emotions came over me. I’ve seen people that live in homes, live in small apartments, multi-generational households. From young kids to their parents to the grandparents, all living in small quarters. I’m taking care of this person who’s really, really sick — and there are about 12 or 15 other people who have been pretty much not practicing, or not able to practice, social distancing. All those people who die on a daily basis — each one is not just a number. Each one is a person, and that one person will have had a huge impact on the inner circle of their family and friends, which could be 100, 200, 500 people.

Photo Credit: Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News

I’ve been a paramedic for a private hospital in New York City for 30 years, but until COVID-19, I’ve never seen so many people die in one shift, day after day.

You have to put up a kind of wall to help you, but at the same time, this has become extremely overwhelming, mentally, for healthcare workers, including the city EMS.

Paramedics give medication, start IVs, intubate. What has really changed after we do all that, and we do CPR and there has been no change in the patient, is we have the grim duty of declaring the person dead at home. We had a gentleman recently who had been sick, COVID-19 positive for two weeks. He wanted to stay home and refused to let his family call 911. Finally, the day came: He was short of breath — he could barely breathe. His family called 911. We got there, he stopped breathing. He had lost his pulse. We worked on him feverishly. He did not survive and he died in the back of our ambulance. This gentleman was probably about 70, with a very close-knit Latino family. We had about 20 people surround the ambulance because they knew we were working on their family member. I had the responsibility to tell them we did our best, but that he had died. At that moment, I realized because this person died in my ambulance, the next step for this family, for this patient, was going to be the city morgue. This was going to be the last time that family was going to see that person for another two weeks, if that. They were distraught.

20

There’s a very human aspect to this, what they called the “invisible enemy.” But it’s not very invisible when you deal with it on a regular basis. As appeared in New York Daily News on April 29, 2020.


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Articles inside

Generation COVID: From the Eye of the Storm, a New Generation is Born

14min
pages 64-72

Want More Women in Leadership Roles? Focus on Their Strategy and Not Their Smile

3min
page 63

Hospital Industry Faces Reckoning: Where Do We Go From Here?

3min
page 57

Imperative Wake Up Call For Industry Leaders: The Time To Think About COVID-19 As A Complex Adaptive Challenge Is Now

6min
pages 59-62

COVID-19: In the Race for a Vaccine, Biopharmaceutical Companies Showing Moral

3min
page 58

The COVID-19 Pandemic: For-Profit Health Plans Win, Hospitals Lose

4min
pages 55-56

Don’t Disparage the Pace of COVID-19 Research

7min
pages 53-54

Amid a Historic Pandemic, Public Health Must Take the Lead Even With Other

3min
page 52

How Tech Is Saving Lives During COVID

4min
pages 50-51

A Pandemic Ethical Conundrum: Must Health Care Workers Risk Their Lives to Treat

27min
pages 39-48

The COVID-19 Vaccine is Coming. But Will We Be Ready?

3min
page 49

The COVID-19 Pandemic is Squeezing Women Out of Science

13min
pages 34-38

Let Ageism Bite the Dust During COVID

3min
page 32

Unspoken and Undone: Caring for Women Dealing with the Emotional Trauma of COVID-19

2min
page 33

A Pandemic in a Pandemic: Gender Based Violence and COVID

3min
page 31

Higher Education’s Misguided Obsession with Diversity Officers

5min
pages 29-30

Too Little or Too Late: U.S. Senate Response to Public Health Crises

4min
pages 26-28

Weighing the Economics, Public Health Benefits of Sheltering in Place

4min
page 25

We Need a Better CARES Package for the Elderly

3min
page 24

A Poignant EMS Week Amid a Historic Pandemic

5min
pages 19-20

NYC Paramedic Describes Holding ‘Ad Hoc Wake’ in Ambulance for Coronavirus Victim

2min
page 22

To Stop College Students from Attending “COVID Parties” Start Asking Why

4min
pages 15-16

The Trump Rally in Tulsa is A Recipe for Disaster

3min
page 10

COVID-19 Patients? Saving Ourselves from the Groundhog Day Effect When the Current Crisis Passes, Will We All Still be Created Equal? May Have Different Answers The Ethical Minefield of Prioritizing Health Care for Some with COVID

3min
page 21

Improving Communication in Technology Driven Mental Health

3min
page 18

With COVID-19, Civil Discontent Must Not Lead to Civil Disobedience

4min
pages 11-14

COVID-Safe: Amidst the Pandemic, Look Out for Number One

3min
page 17

Senator Paul’s Skepticism of Experts Sets a Very Dangerous Precedent

3min
page 8

To End the Female Recession, Women Need Their Own Rally Cry

4min
page 7

Trump’s Kung Flu Takes its Place in Chronology of Racial Fear-Mongering

3min
page 9
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