Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The fist waves of this virus are already here and our hospitals are....doing fine with it. Look about what is actually happening as opposed to waiting for the worst to happen. The virus is here and it is already happening.
Hospitals are doing fine with it because many patients are temporarily staying away from hospitals. ER visits aren’t down 20% (per my boss). Plus, some of our ER visits are patients coming for bloodwork before an elective surgery (which are now all cancelled). Eventually many people will be sick enough that they can’t avoid the hospitals. If a surge of people flood the ER at once, we won’t be able to handle it.
Anonymous wrote:Here are some resources for health professionals at this stressful time (from the AMA).
https://www.ama-assn.org/delivering-care/public-health/caring-our-caregivers-during-covid-19
Also some great ideas for volunteers to support them!
Anonymous wrote:My partner is a hospice physician in Boston. I am in fear for his life. I also work in health care in Florida. If you are not on or close to the front lines you have no idea the stress and fear some are facing. Count yourself lucky and keep your uninformed opinions to yourself.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I just got a call from a dear friend on the front lines who is also experienced and hardened, and who burst into tears. She can't wear masks into rooms of patients in severe respitory distress because of PPE shortages. She is exhausted and petrified.
You people who are minimizing this, eff you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been monitoring ER wait times at the inova hospitals in NOVA (https://www.inova.org/emergency-room-wait-times) for the past two weeks and they've remained consistent. My assumption is that the system is still working fine if ERs are moving people in and out. Is that not the case?
I don't know about that one, but there was an ER wait time tracker I was following a few weeks ago, until I realized that the times were identical day after day. Not actually tracking isht.
DP. Confirming: these wait times haven't changed in weeks https://www.hospitalstats.org/ER-Wait-Time/Washington-DC-Metro.htm
Hospital - Total Wait Times
Sibley Memorial Hospital 3h 4m
George Washington Univ Hospital 3h 31m
Georgetown University Hospital 3h 50m
Washington Hospital Center 4h 16m
Howard University Hospital 4h 23m
Providence Hospital 5h 8m
United Medical Center 5h 44m
Children's Hospital Nmc N/A
Wow. Is that average wait time? Over 5 hours?
Thankful for doctors/nurses/techs who are so busy. I was expecting them to have spiked to 10 -12 hours at this point.
that website says clearly at the top:
"Coronavirus Alert: Wait times are statistical averages and may not reflect current wait times during the pandemic."
it also lists providence hospital, which i believe has been closed.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a nurse. I don’t pity myself for not being able to stay home. I signed up for this. I like taking care of sick patients. Why am I worried and angry? Because we are not being given the proper equipment. The government did not prepare for this even though they saw it coming. No testing when it would have been helpful. Barely any testing now. Possible exposure? Keep working unless you have symptoms. Have symptoms? We aren’t testing you. I feel you OP. I work for the biggest hospital in NoVa and I think in a couple of weeks, we are going to be screwed.