A crying doctor, patients gasping for air and limited coronavirus tests: A look inside a triage tent in Chicago
Michael Dolan describes his experience at Northwestern as “an entirely preventable human disaster†— but he doesn’t blame the hospital or its medical staff.
https://chicago.suntimes.com/coronavirus/2020/4/1/21202205/northwestern-hospital-coronavirus-triage-tent-michael-dolan
Much more disgusting failure at link
'triage tent in Chicago.' WTF? Where are the GD tests?
"And despite 15 days of serious symptoms, including a 105-degree fever, Dolan still hasn’t been tested for COVID-19."
(Snip)
“Dolan was told he couldn’t get tested, though, because he was young and hadn’t traveled from a hotspot. Instead, the doctor would consider Dolan an unofficial coronavirus patient and check in with him a week later for updates on his condition — just as the physician was already doing with 11 others.â€
(Snip)
When Dolan showed up to Northwestern, he had a fever and chills, his heart rate was fluctuating and he had a cough and migraine. A doctor there told him she knew he certainly had COVID-19 and, according to Dolan, said he was “the worst patient your age group that I’ve seen.â€
(Snip)
Yet he still was told he couldn’t get a test because he wasn’t 65 years or older.
@Once-LerYes, where are the GD tests! The tests we were told how many weeks ago, that would be available (and free) to anyone who wanted one; the tests you could get at all those drive-throughs in the parking lots of Target, CVS, Walgreens, Walmart; all the places doing testing that you could find via that Google website we were promised that never materialized? Remember that? Pepperidge Farms and the “Member Berries†might not ‘member but I do.
And this is what is disturbing to me. We have some people saying that because of all the mild or asymptomatic cases, the CFR will end up being much lower, lower than influenza when all is said and done and therefore COVID-19 is no big deal. You know, just take a deep breath, no big deal, everything is fine.
But I would suggest that we have no idea how many are mild or asymptomatic if we can’t even test people who are severely ill and showing up at ER’s because they don’t meet some criteria such as being 65 years or older or having a history of travel from a “hot spotâ€, likely because in truth, we 1) do not have near enough tests and 2) do not have enough capacity and materials to process the tests we do have.
And should this 39-year old die from pneumonia (and I hope and pray he doesn’t) without ever having been tested for COVID-19, would he be tested for it post mortem or would the cause of death be “garden variety†pneumonia and not counted as a COVID-19 death? And would this skew the mortality rate higher to a younger and healthier demographic than what we’ve been led to believe?
IMO, the reason to be concerned about the mild or asymptomatic cases is how the disease can be spread by that cohort and the very reason why social distancing is so important. But perhaps we need to not count these unknown and estimated mild or asymptomatic cases when calculating a CFR because if they never get any symptoms or the symptoms are mild and don’t last for more than a day or two, those people, while capable of spreading, are not in any danger of dying. Perhaps we need to factor in more heavily those with more severe symptoms when calculating the CFR especially with the testing foul up but we can’t even do that if we aren’t testing.
And we GD should be testing people who come to a doctor’s office or urgent care or ER with all the symptoms regardless of their age.
End of rant.
