Health care workers in Aruba plead with you to stay home and avoid travel

“Health Care Workers Plead With Americans To Take Pandemic More Seriously” (NPR):

Health workers and hospitals already strained by the pandemic are increasingly making direct appeals to the public with open letters, asking people to mask up and stay at home this holiday season.

I was chatting this evening with our stealth author of Medical School 2020. He’s working 12-hour shifts at a hospital where roughly 8 percent of the beds are occupied by COVID-19 patients. “Remember that if someone comes in with appendicitis and happens to test positive, they become a ‘COVID-19 patient’ in our census,” he said.

How seriously do frontline health care workers take the pandemic? Our mole in the system described a doc and nurse couple electing to take a mid-November vacation in Aruba. They got on a flight that was 100-percent full, thus voluntarily spending hours sharing a narrow cylinder of air with 150+ other humans. When they got off the plane, they were subjected to screening questions by the Aruban authorities. Instead of admitting that they worked in a hospital every day, they said that they “worked in biochem.” On reaching the (packed) resort, they said “The majority of the other guests were health care workers” (i.e., there were additional hundreds of doctors, nurses, etc. who had chosen to take the risk of contracting COVID-19 at the jammed airports or on the full flights).

(Separately, should COVID-19 patients be in the hospital to begin with? It is not like having a heart attack or getting into a car accident where the doctors have effective treatments to offer. Why aren’t they at home with an oxygen bottle and a CPAP machine or high-flow nasal cannula? A med school professor friend:

Many things could be done from home cheaper and safer but we don’t have the infrastructure or culture. Home model kills the rationale for the hospital cash cow.

Our Medical School 2020 author:

I agree that outside of severe Covid, most of the interventions can be done at home — we send patients home with up to 5 L O2 for bad COPD. It somewhat reminds me of the slow transition from inpatient to outpatient management for other conditions, e.g., deep ventous thromobosis (“blood clots in the legs”) that now is managed with oral blood thinners at home instead of in the hospital. … There are really only a few interventions that we do for covid19 — low and high flow oxygen supplementation, noninvasive (think CPAP) or invasive mechanical ventilation, steroids (actually a good intervention for mechanically ventilated patients — 30 vs 40 percent 1-month mortality) and remdesivir (only benefit shown in low O2 patients with decrease in hospital stay of 10 vs 15 days in small study). … I agree that the only difference for non-severe covid infections between home versus inpatient is just getting telemetry monitoring and daily labs in the hope of catching worsening pulmonary function or prognostication of the weird complications of covid (e.g., heart attacks, blood clots). Unsure of our prognostic ability to guess who will worsen versus who will improve early on in the course (uptodate states the shortness of breath from covid19 occurs up to 8 days after symptom onset). Perhaps utilizing some Apple Watches and Fitbits over those 8 days might save some hospital beds.

See “A Covid-19 Lesson: Some Seriously Ill Patients Can Be Treated at Home” (NYT, July 18) for a story about a hospital that innovated.)

Is #StayHomeSaveLives the new #TakeTheBusSaveThePlanet? Classically, everyone agrees that it would be a good idea if other people took the bus or the subway, thus reducing traffic congestion and pollution.

From the official Aruba tourism site:

(I would love to go right now, but despite my reputation for skepticism regarding coronapanic, I would not voluntarily get on a commercial airline with all seats full.)

Related:

8 thoughts on “Health care workers in Aruba plead with you to stay home and avoid travel

    • The Swedes have closed high schools, which they also did back in the spring plague. They’re still running schools for under-16s and the children go to school without masks. Still mostly consistent with “giving the finger to the virus” and carrying on with the essentials (in-person school for under-16s, in-person work and social life for adults). They’ve had to give up mass commercial gatherings, such as movie theaters (formerly limited to 50 people at a time, now down to 8).

      Considering that this is the one-year anniversary of coronaplague, Sweden hasn’t spent a tremendous amount of time or energy on coronapanic.

  1. Hands-Off On Covid — Making Your Tax Dollars Go Further in Sweden?

    “Businesses such as restaurants, hotels and retail outfits are facing a wave of closures; unlike in the rest of Europe, where governments coupled restrictions with generous stimulus, Swedish authorities have offered comparatively less support to businesses since they didn’t impose closures.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/long-a-holdout-from-covid-19-restrictions-sweden-ends-its-pandemic-experiment-11607261658?st=cqtzkh12g6fu36x&reflink=article_email_share

  2. How about making an index for that med school book/blog. It takes ages to scroll and find where you left off.

  3. >I would not voluntarily get on a commercial airline with all seats full.

    I assume you were flying private to all destinations you blogged about in recent months, but then why not to Aruba?

    • Getting to Aruba in a reasonably direct manner requires crossing a lot of water in a single-engine plane. “Trust but verify,” as Reagan said. “Trust but stay over land if possible,” is my mantra!

  4. “a doc and nurse couple electing to take a mid-November vacation in Aruba.”

    I take it this doc not read “Real World Divorce.”

    • Rate of return on a nursing degree may exceed a medical degree going forward. So if these two are both highly leveraged with medical school and nursing or PA school loans, it won’t be clear under Bidencare/Medicare who will be the higher earner over the course of their careers (due to considerably higher cost of MD degree versus nursing/PA degree).

Comments are closed.