Demoralized health workers struggle as virus numbers surge

Demoralized health workers struggle as virus numbers surge

SeattlePI.com

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Doctors and nurses around the U.S. are becoming exhausted and demoralized as they struggle to cope with a record-breaking surge of COVID-19 patients that is overwhelming hospitals and prompting governors to clamp back down to contain the virus.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Friday banned indoor dining in New York City, saying he had been waiting in vain for hospitalization rates to stabilize. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf did the same on Thursday and also suspended school sports and closed gyms, theaters and casinos.

A record of more than 107,000 people were in the hospital in the U.S. with COVID-19 as of Thursday, according to the COVID Tracking Project. More than 290,000 Americans have died of the virus.

Hospitals around the country have been overrun.

“We’re constantly looking for beds,” said Cassie Ban, an intensive care nurse at Indiana University Health.

Before the pandemic, an ICU nurse might handle two patients per shift. Ban said she now regularly cares for four or five. The national death toll doesn’t begin to capture what COVID-19 does to each critically ill patient or the medical teams who care for them, she said.

“I wish people could see what I do,” Ban said. “People are terrified and they’re alone. Each one of those numbers is the death of a person who wasn’t ready to go yet.”

Although concerns remain about getting enough beds, masks and other equipment, many frontline health workers are most worried about staff shortages.

Nurses are the most scare resource of all, said Kiersten Henry, an ICU nurse practitioner at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center in Olney, Maryland.

“I feel we’ve already run a marathon, and this is our second one. Even people who are upbeat are feeling run down at this point," Henry said.

Many expressed frustration...

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