Coronavirus prep

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Replies

  • lkpducky
    lkpducky Posts: 17,618 Member
    edited December 2020
    I'm surprised autoimmune conditions aren't on that list.
  • T1DCarnivoreRunner
    T1DCarnivoreRunner Posts: 11,502 Member
    edited December 2020
    Not that this is probably news to most here, but ICU capacity is running out in a lot of places. My county has 3 beds left according to the map, but that is 74% full since we only have 14 beds total.

    Intensive Care Beds Are Nearing Capacity Across the Country, New Data Shows https://nyti.ms/3n51mZG

    Edit to add that I don't know how good these numbers are. Some places have been including NICU beds in the total because they are an ICU bed... but that doesn't help us adults.
  • ReenieHJ
    ReenieHJ Posts: 9,724 Member
    glp2323 wrote: »
    I'm 38 and severely obese (BMI >50). Covid was my wake-up call. I always thought I had time to lose weight and get healthy. Unfortunately, it took Covid for me to realize how precious time was, and that I may not make it through the year because of my weight.

    The past several months I've lost a lot of weight (avg. 3-4lbs a week lost) and have made dramatic changes to my diet. However, although it's possible to lose weight you can't do it overnight. My reality is I will likely remain "high-risk" for the duration of this pandemic, even though I will continue to do my best to lose weight. I wish now, I began this weight loss journey earlier. All I can do is look ahead, and continue to hope and pray my family and I continue to avoid catching this terrible virus.

    I wish there were more positive testimonials of overweight people who have recovered from COVID because the news can make you feel that if you catch it and are obese you die. It's a scary reality some of us have to live with despite knowing we have to change.

    I hope you all stay safe and healthy.

    Kudos to you for making changes!!! <3

    And I agree with you about the news being a bit more positive. But then maybe more people would feel it's nothing to be afraid of after all and go about their merry ways? IDK. I wish there was a way to put a positive spin on contracting it and doing better than you think you will, but I don't think this is a virus with any guarantees. :( Just wish it wasn't so scary and unknown Hopefully all that will change as we continue to learn, experience and find better treatments/vaccines.
  • corinasue1143
    corinasue1143 Posts: 7,464 Member
    I’m really struck by the general tone of this thread. I don’t think people realize how hospitals and ICUs are run in general. I worked as an RN in a telemetry unit, which is a step down from ICU. Every single year during the flu season, the hospital filled up, as did the ICU. It was not unusual to people to come into the ER, and either have to wait 12-24 hours because there were no beds available or even the hospital would direct ambulances away, because they were full. There were many times when the ICU was full and so they would send the patient who needed to be in the ICU onto the telemetry unit with a ICU nurse to take care of them.
    This was a normal occurrence in a city with a large number of hospitals.
    They didn’t just send patients out on their own and say “Oh well!”.
    I do get annoyed when I hear non medical people really freaking out about full hospitals and ICUs, as though this just shows this is the end of the world. This always happens every year. COVID is just highlighting the real problems with the system. Hospitals operate to maximize their profits. They don’t want empty beds sitting around. If there are too many for too long, they either cut staff or offer new services.
    A real part of this problem is the way hospitals are run. They are operating on a knife’s edge for profit. Not once have I heard this being addressed. Even in normal times, RNs have a burnout time of about 2 years because they are so overworked. So when I hear people freaking out about how nurses are overworked, it’s nothing new.
    Full hospitals and overworked nurses are not shocking things. Of course it’s worse than normal, but but definitely not shocking.

    Thanks for saying it so well
  • Dnarules
    Dnarules Posts: 2,081 Member
    I’m really struck by the general tone of this thread. I don’t think people realize how hospitals and ICUs are run in general. I worked as an RN in a telemetry unit, which is a step down from ICU. Every single year during the flu season, the hospital filled up, as did the ICU. It was not unusual to people to come into the ER, and either have to wait 12-24 hours because there were no beds available or even the hospital would direct ambulances away, because they were full. There were many times when the ICU was full and so they would send the patient who needed to be in the ICU onto the telemetry unit with a ICU nurse to take care of them.
    This was a normal occurrence in a city with a large number of hospitals.
    They didn’t just send patients out on their own and say “Oh well!”.
    I do get annoyed when I hear non medical people really freaking out about full hospitals and ICUs, as though this just shows this is the end of the world. This always happens every year. COVID is just highlighting the real problems with the system. Hospitals operate to maximize their profits. They don’t want empty beds sitting around. If there are too many for too long, they either cut staff or offer new services.
    A real part of this problem is the way hospitals are run. They are operating on a knife’s edge for profit. Not once have I heard this being addressed. Even in normal times, RNs have a burnout time of about 2 years because they are so overworked. So when I hear people freaking out about how nurses are overworked, it’s nothing new.
    Full hospitals and overworked nurses are not shocking things. Of course it’s worse than normal, but but definitely not shocking.

    Thanks for that input. I think the fact that the flu season is just getting started in the US makes this especially worrisome, for both patients and healthcare workers. I have a number of students who work in healthcare, and I know the demands can be overwhelming.
  • SummerSkier
    SummerSkier Posts: 5,127 Member
    So for a while we were saying that the death rates were declining because we were understanding how to treat this better. The death rates seem to be climbing like crazy. Why are the treatments not working or are there just that many more people that are sick?
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    I read your initial post (rather casually, probably, I admit), and thought you were saying "this is no big deal, it happens regularly", which is something a lot of non-medical people around me seem to be saying to minimize the seriousness of the situation. From replies, I suspect some others read it the same way.

    Yes, I did, especially since I recalled some earlier posts about how we were overreacting to covid with the shutdowns (long after pretty much everything seemed to have reopened, for the most part), so read it in that light.

    Glad I was wrong.
    Since you've clarified, it sounds more like "our health system was already bursting at the seams during local peaks, so that's not a new thing". That makes sense.

    Agreed, although what I've read suggests things are significantly worse and patients who otherwise would get care are potentially not going to be able to get it in a new way, some places, so I do think that aspect is a new or different thing from how it normally is.
    I'm not an expert, but one current thing that does seem somewhat novel to me is that so many hospitals in so many places are simultaneously peaking capacity with Covid patients, so that some of the usual-times safety valves (inter-hospital transfers, deferring non-crisis procedures, etc.) aren't working. I have read about specific hospitals/systems sending people home with oxygen, people whom they'd normally admit, though I have no direct personal knowledge to confirm the reports.

    Yes, this.