the staff at the hospital my wife works at is getting hit hard with cases... it's becoming a huge problem there. I appreciate her insight and knowledge on all this but man is she really starting to freak me out
the staff at the hospital my wife works at is getting hit hard with cases... it's becoming a huge problem there. I appreciate her insight and knowledge on all this but man is she really starting to freak me out
I have NO DOUBT that all healthcare workers are thinking about and concerned for those fighting the good fight.I do CT scans at a hospital in Vancouver, WA (a suburb of Portland, OR and about 150 miles south of Seattle). I usually do interventional procedures, not ER or diagnostic cases, but I imagine I'll end up back in diagnostic fairly soon. We had 2 new cases today. We aren't as bad as Seattle/Kirkland, YET. We've put up 3 big tents outside the ER for triage. We are finally starting to take temps at the door tonight. I ordered N95 masks from the stockroom and got none. I'm not freaking, yet. A lot of stress and a bit of resignation or acceptance that if I don't have it in a couple of weeks, it's gonna be a miracle. I'm not feeling very optimistic.
Let her know all of us healthcare workers in the, so far, less hit places are thinking of them! We can't do anything, but we're hoping for the best for everyone.
the staff at the hospital my wife works at is getting hit hard with cases... it's becoming a huge problem there. I appreciate her insight and knowledge on all this but man is she really starting to freak me out
I do CT scans at a hospital in Vancouver, WA (a suburb of Portland, OR and about 150 miles south of Seattle). I usually do interventional procedures, not ER or diagnostic cases, but I imagine I'll end up back in diagnostic fairly soon. We had 2 new cases today. We aren't as bad as Seattle/Kirkland, YET. We've put up 3 big tents outside the ER for triage. We are finally starting to take temps at the door tonight. I ordered N95 masks from the stockroom and got none. I'm not freaking, yet. A lot of stress and a bit of resignation or acceptance that if I don't have it in a couple of weeks, it's gonna be a miracle. I'm not feeling very optimistic.
The "no intervention" map on june 28 is essentially solid red.
Yikes
Where do you think we actually fall. Closer to some intervention or severe intervention?
yeah. respiratory issues such as asthma are considered high risk in regards to Coronavirus.The 34 year old man in California who died had the following underlying medical conditions.
If that's all it takes for underlying medical conditions this virus is much more deadly than we thought.
- Asthma as a child
- Bronchitis as a child
- Testicular cancer in 2016 (fully recovered)