'I have worked the last four days, and I have cried every day.' Eileen McStay, a registered nurse at the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, is on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic. Read more:
Frontline health care workers directly engaged in treating patients with COVID-19 are three times as likely to suffer insomnia and more than 50% more likely to suffer depression or anxiety, according to the results published online March 23 inDr. Roy Perlis is a psychiatrist with Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston, who wrote an editorial accompanying the study.
"I've worked for the last four days on a floor with all COVID-positive patients. It can't get more of the 'eye of the storm' for me," McStay said. "These people have no visitors. There are no visitors allowed in the hospital. People are so scared and so alone, and so are we," McStay said. Spiritual care advisors and peer support networks are up and running, reaching out to patients and staff in need. All workers have been given an app with which they can track their symptoms, so other staff can tell them whether they should worry about being infected.McStay said she walks up a big hill to work every day, and yesterday she got worried when she became short of breath on the way up.
Brasil Últimas Notícias, Brasil Manchetes
Similar News:Você também pode ler notícias semelhantes a esta que coletamos de outras fontes de notícias.
Baby monitors in the ICU: Nurses get creative to save lives, critical equipmentPrompted by a lack of resources and occupational hazards, nurses are cooking up novel ways to fight the novel virus. The latest trend? Baby monitors.
Consulte Mais informação »
Missouri nurses join plea for governor to issue stay-at-home orderRachel Maddow notes that despite pleas from Missouri health care providers and the fact that the number of coronavirus cases in Missouri jumped 600% last week, Governor Parson has no plans for a statewide stay-at-home order.
Consulte Mais informação »
Baby monitors in the ICU: Nurses get creative to save lives, critical equipmentAn influx of coronavirus patients has overwhelmed the American health care infrastructure, leaving front-line medical providers to improvise creative solutions to the day-to-day pitfalls of treating those afflicted with the highly contagious disease. 'It’s a great example of nursing innovation
Consulte Mais informação »
Royal Caribbean Cruise Won't Give Nurses Refunds for ConventionNurses are getting screwed by a cruise line that refuses to give them their money back for a conference at sea.
Consulte Mais informação »
Nurses across US to protest over 'lack of preparedness'"Protecting our patients is our highest priority, but it becomes much harder when we don&39;t have the safe protections," one nurse said.
Consulte Mais informação »