Somebody asked the doctor about his wife.He remembers the incident and writes a diary.
Suppose you are a doctor. Write a diary.
Answers
Answer:
2 April 2020
Not that long ago the hospital had just a few Covid-positive patients, isolated inside rooms. By the start of this week we had two full wards designated as "red" or infectious zones. And two more turned red a day later.
One of the most overused phrases that we use as doctors is, "It's just a virus." It reassures our patients, and it covers up our own uncertainty. So for many the devastation that the coronavirus has wrought has been so unexpected.
By Wednesday, 14 of our patients had died.
This is one of the big issues around Covid-19 - its high death rate. So while less than one in a 100 of those who get it will die of it, when you get into hospital that goes up to one in five, or one in six patients.
We are used to people dying in hospital, because it's often a place where people die. But normally we are reflective in our practice, we give time, and time is a great instrument for us in health care. But in the hospital today we are making rapid decisions about life and death - decisions about ventilation, about escalation care and when to make the decision about end of-life-care.
As palliative care consultant Dr Clare Rayment says, none of us wants to get it wrong.
line
Front line diary
Image copyrightVICTOR DE JESUSJohn Wright
Prof John Wright, a medical doctor and epidemiologist, is head of the Bradford Institute for Health Research. He has looked after patients in epidemics all over the world, including cholera, HIV and ebola outbreaks in sub-Saharan Africa. Over the next few weeks he will be reporting for the BBC on how his hospital, the Bradford Royal Infirmary, copes with Covid-19.
line
"There's a lot of worrying about making those rationing decisions because it's not something we are used to in the UK," she says.
"I think in other countries it's something they might be more used to having conversations about. We are used to people dying in hospital but we aren't used to saying, 'You're going to die because I can't give you this ventilator because someone needs it more.'"
Many of us have got parents, and we may worry that these decisions like these are going to be taken on the basis of the patient's age.
But age is only one factor.
Image copyrightJOHN WRIGHTMedical staff have been training for redeployment to intensive care wards
Image captionHospital staff have been training for redeployment to intensive care wards
"We should recognise this as a society, that so many 80-year-olds are actually in better physical and mental shape than some 65-year-olds. That 80-year-old shouldn't be written off," says Dr Alex Brown, a consultant in elderly care.
Another feature of Covid-19 is that people are dying alone. Hardly anyone is allowed into the hospital now to visit.
So the challenge is "thinking about how best we can make sure those people have good deaths in an environment where their family members are likely not to be," Clare Rayment says.
Answer:
2 April...............