How health workers are responding to the COVID19 pandemic Esther Choo

hi dr. chu hey Whitney how are you thank

you for being with us today I’m good

thank you so much for having me on you

know I I’m store that you’re working

around the clock these days so it really

it means a lot that you took some time

to be with us and you know I think I I

asked how you are but I would love to

hear you know truly like how are our

things going how are you making out in

these times yeah I mean I personally

can’t complain you know Oregon is not

New York right now we’ve actually taken

a lot of early public health measures

and are being pretty successful at

flattening the curve so certainly I mean

we’re seeing cases it is a time like no

other in healthcare I mean really

experienced nothing like this it is you

know I’m part of this kind of big

community of frontline health care

workers and talking to my friends around

the country and around the world really

who are in the emergency room or or are

working in the intensive care units and

it it is an incredibly stressful time as

a whole but but here in Oregon we’re

lucky to still be waiting for the wave

to hit us and and you you know mention

this at Oregon is not has not been hit

as hard as some other states but I guess

could you talk a little bit more about

what you were saying there with Oregon

flattening the curve and tell us a

little bit more about what the situation

looks like there and then also in your

hospital specifically yeah I mean the

the first case in the United States of

course came to Seattle which is just

three and a half hours up the road as it

happened it came the first case that was

detected was someone who works at the

school were my that my kids attend which

is one block from my house so when it

came to Oregon it started feeling real

very quickly and then early on we saw

the pattern that we were seeing across

the United States I mean the doubling

times here were every two and a half to

three days

and I think between watching what was

happening in Seattle where the case has

really exploded we we took our

stay-at-home order very seriously you

know so schools were shut down pretty

early on people have really been trying

to abide by stay-at-home recommendations

and and we we watched that doubling time

start to stretch out and the progressed

the projections for what our hospitals

would see for our needs for bed space

for intensive care unit base and for

ventilators started going down until

until you could see that probably we

will be within the resources that we

have in our state

which is wonderful and earlier this week

you know Oregon was able to to clench to

send 140 ventilators to New York City

there try to help them meet the need in

this time of crisis so it’s you know

we’re still at the stage where it’s very

very different from state to state I

mean the cat is kind of out of the bag

in certain states in Washington and in

New York but many other states still

have the opportunity to change their

fate so it’s really a day-to-day battle

to make sure that we stay in the game

and that we we continue to be really

vigilant with all of our public health

measures or even escalate efforts so

that we can get over that hump and get

to the other side of this thing I mean

and that’s it’s amazing to hear that

things seem to be going really well or

going or doing much better and and you

know I’m curious I’m talking about those

other states that you mentioned that

maybe aren’t faring as well I know

you’re in touch with a lot of colleagues

in other parts of the country you know

what are you hearing from folks who are

maybe in some of those harder hit areas

yeah it’s really unlike anything you’ve

seen I mean the thing to understand

about emergency care and disaster

response systems is this is what we do

you know it’s not like we run on the

assumption of of normality you know we

we are always planning for the

worst-case scenario and so we’re we’re

prepared for disasters but but normal

quote-unquote normal disasters are

they’re so much more contained than this

so you know we’re ready for earthquakes

hurricanes other national natural

disasters or maybe a single mass

casualty all these things that have so

much more so many more sort of borders

to them you know these discrete events

maybe they affect a single city or a

region or you know you’re in a position

where other states or regions can can

chip in I mean you’ve seen after some of

our largest disasters things like 9/11

other countries were so willing to sort

of lend a hand in terms of our our of

addressing our aftermath and and this is

one of those things where where should

the help be coming because we’re all

dealing with this at the same time and

so everybody is either in full in it you

know like they are in New York City

either they’re they’re in there just

trying to deal with a huge caseload of

patients and then very sick patients and

just scrambling to be really creative

around these these limited resources

that we have everything from personal

protective equipment to the medications

and space and ventilators and healthcare

workers to just being in full-on

preparation mode and that’s kind of

where we are right now in Oregon because

our our peak is expected to hit at the

end of April or early May and so we’re

using that precious time to try to

figure out in every eventualities our

are we going to to handle this surge so

no matter what whether the wave has hit

or whether it’s about to hit everyone is

really working 24/7 around this pandemic

and you know when I think about

emergency workers even before this time

you know I always think about them in

general just like a you know sort of

chaotic frantic space and you know I

have mentioned that that may change have

changed a little bit in the recent weeks

and so could you talk a little bit about

what your day-to-day experiences are

like now as compared to what they would

have been like what they were like

pre-pandemic yeah totally and again I’ll

speak to the experiences of health care

workers that I’m hearing from everywhere

you know rather than just mine

individual er but there there’s kind of

two parts to this one is in normal times

we run hospitals pretty lean you know so

we don’t we don’t run it so that you

walk into a shift and you’re relaxing

for half of it you know or or so that we

have a bunch of empty beds just in case

I mean you run it to be pretty close to

maxed out all the time because we really

run it for financial efficiency you know

so hospitals more and more are very full

we’re not expanding hospital wards we’re

really running them as pretty close to

peak and in the emergency department I’m

on a regular day let’s say a weekend

evening shift when when an ER doctor

walks in or an ER nurse walks in you

kind of stop and take this deep breath

because you know you’re going to be

running non-stop basically all-out for

your entire shift eight to twelve hours

or whatever it is and so in normal

circumstances we are I mean you feel

pretty close to max capacity and then

add on to that a pandemic and you kind

of think of your worst regular day and

and in places where they’ve already hit

search it’s twice regular or three times

or five times or ten times that and so

you went from it never was a relaxing

job I mean it was always a stressful job

where there’s only so much one person

can do and yet you’re doing more than

that all the time and just trying to

keep people safe - really - really you

know some order of magnitude higher than

that so places that are hit hard really

impossibly busy and then and then on the

flip side we are we have really done a

lot of work in terms of public messaging

and messaging through a health system

that if you are not very sick you should

stay away because first of all we need

to care for these kovat 19 patients and

also you don’t want to get sick by

coming here because this is where the

Cova 19 patients are coming so for your

own safety and your family’s safety

please stay away and so people even

people with very serious health

conditions are are staying away

and our caseload in the emergency room

is actually very different and so we’re

disproportionately seeing patients who

have fever

you know respiratory illnesses symptoms

that are likely cope at 19 but almost

everything else has gone away or gone

down I think what else has contributed

to that is that with all of this social

distancing so people are staying at home

they’re not going to parties or bars or

restaurants or places where you might

drink a lot and get into trouble

afterwards so a lot of that Friday night

Saturday night trauma that we would

normally normally see car accidents from

drunk driving or just from high traffic

conditions I mean all the things that

happen when you throw a whole bunch of

humans together in close quarters though

that is kind of our bread and butter in

the emergency room and we’re not seeing

that whole chunk as much the puzzling

thing is actually why we’re not seeing

things that have no relationship to Cove

in nineteen imeem heart attacks strokes

those diseases have not gotten any

notice that they should wait until kovat

is over you know and so where are those

diseases I mean there was an op-ed in

The New York Times the other day

wondering if people who have very

legitimate reasons to come into the

hospitals are also avoiding avoiding the

house but not that other things aren’t

legitimate but you know things that that

are true emergencies that we should be

seen immediately otherwise can lead the

very poor outcomes or even death in a

short period of time what you know what

kind of collateral damage are we seeing

because people are afraid to come in so

but all of that adds up to a very

strange environment in the hospital

right now yeah I mean and that’s and

that’s so interesting to hear it sounds

like in some ways people are being

really more thoughtful about how when

they actually do need to seek out care

and when they can handle something

themselves and I and I imagine it

probably remains to be seen whether

that’s better that people are dealing

with some things on their own at home or

or whether that’s worse what is your

take on that probably a mix of both I

mean I think the truth is right in the

middle I think when we go back to normal

it’s hard to imagine a time they’ll come

back to normal but probably when we go

back to nor

we’ll see some things we’ve learned can

stay out of the emergency room or you

know I think we’re being very creative

about telehealth right now and I’m

getting people to get health care

through their computers or their phones

and I think we’ll probably find that

that that we continue to have expanded

use of telemedicine after this because

it worked so well I bet people actually

be very happy and surprised by the

number of things that you can do at home

for some common health conditions but I

also think that when the surge is over

for every state we will get an influx of

those delayed care cases that will kind

of be the second surge of stress on the

healthcare system not directly rated

related to code 19 but what we’re kind

of calling the collateral damage I’m

deferred health problems that really

could have benefited from an earlier

visit to the hospital emergency room or

and in-person visit to your doc to your

doctor or nurse practitioner or whoever

and you know as the months have gone on

and you know we’ve been dealing with

this as a country as a world you know

for these past few months in emergency

rooms in your emergency room how have

you seen the situation change or worsen

you know how are things different now

than they were say back in early

February I mean now we are in it I mean

all of us to some extent I mean it’s hit

all 50 states and so it went from this

anticipation to really needing to make

those hard decisions and I mean this is

so challenging always but in this

disease we’re not familiar with it and

so we are learning on the fly so we’re

learning from China from Italy from

South Korea and then from our own early

States but that decision making changes

so fast that that really there are some

days where I feel like the hospital I

walk out of at the end of my shift is

different than the hospital I walk into

at the beginning of my shift and I’m

hearing this from colleagues all over

the place it’s not just at my

institution where people are sitting you

know we’ve created these these COBIT

emergency task force or committees that

make decisions for for every health

system

and people are sitting and receiving

data as it rolls in and then using that

data to enrich the response in their own

institution so whether it’s I’m trying

to think of a good example like even

just what we decide to do around brown

face masks or around how we manage

certain types of patients what

medications were looking at as potential

therapies I mean this is how wild and

and quick it is a few weeks ago earlier

in this pandemic we were concerned about

a certain class of blood pressure

medication called AR B’s angiotensin

receptor blockers and the rumor was that

these were harmful that these would

actually lead to more severe disease and

there was a question about whether we

should be taking patients off of those

medications who are using them for blood

pressure control 3 weeks later that

medication is being used in the hospital

as a potential therapy I mean that is

how fast a science is changing it was it

was bad

now it’s potentially really good I mean

I it’s a constant process of keeping up

with what the best evidence is telling

us is right to do and I mean I’ll just

tell you you’re always wondering am I

getting it wrong right now as I feel

like it’s gonna be different in about 24

hours and you just do the best that you

can with with current information well I

mean - you’ve been documenting your

experiences and uh sort of talking about

what how you’ve been going through this

pandemic and your new podcast doctor’s

log and you know you’ve talked about

some of the unique challenges that

health workers are facing one of those

being heightened exposure to the virus

and so I’d love to talk about that a

little bit just you know what are some

of the physical ways what does the

physical toll that this pandemic is

having on health workers yeah this is

this is so stressful I mean we are used

to working under conditions where your

risk is some nonzero number above that

of the general population you know we

see dangerous infections all the time

there is violence in the health care

works the workplace because of the

volatility of what we see all the time

and so there’s a little bit of you know

adrenaline there that’s that’s always

present and that we we’re used to over

time you actually become completely a

nerd to some of these things that aren’t

a part of other people’s day-to-day

existence but with this we have a you

know a disease that’s highly

transmissible and also is is leads to

very severe disease and so you know and

then you throw in there the shortage of

this one simple resource which is this

personal protective equipment and when

you put those three things together and

we’re seeing a high volume of patients

it’s you know it’s it really becomes

stressful on a different level because

it’s rare that we see something in the

hospital where we have to worry what am

i bringing home to my family member

because I wasn’t perfectly protected

against this very dangerous disease and

I think when you add on that layer of

personal stress all the time am i right

by doing this thing that I love to do

care for patients am I putting my family

at risk

am i putting other patients at risk my

colleagues at risk I think that has been

one of the most emotionally draining

things of this of this whole pandemic is

just not just not being free to kind of

go in and just do your clinical duty to

the top of your potential but having

this added layer of of constant stress

about how much you’re able to do it

safely yeah I mean it’s seeing these

headlines really across the world about

the number of health workers who

contract the virus and you know that

sort of thing is is is really upsetting

and you know thank you doctor true for

all you do and I think another thing

that you talk about you know and also

thinking about you mentioned not having

PPE but also other equipment that we’ve

seen a lot in the headlines that are

we’re lacking in the hospitals are

shortage of our ventilators

you’ve talked about this and how it’s

not just enough to think about the

ventilators themselves but you know what

are some other factors that we need to

consider when we’re thinking about the

need for ventilators in in medical

centers and hospitals yeah the the needs

are so great and it’s really everything

that you know it’s everything that

surrounds the ventilator you know it’s

it none of these things live in

isolation you know and so when I think

of just the issue of the ventilator um

that we’re running out of it’s like well

you you actually need highly trained

staff to use a ventilator it’s not like

you can just take anybody and just put

them next to a ventilator and they can

start programming it in this super fancy

you know with with all skill and

confidence you know we we rely on the

fact that there’s a highly trained

workforce including respiratory

therapists intensive care unit trained

specifically trained physicians nurses

who are really experienced in ICU care

even to put somebody on a ventilator you

need a number of common medications just

a date and paralyze them so that they

can tolerate the insertion of a pretty

rigid plastic tube down their throat and

then to keep them in a state that’s

comfortable so that they can stay on

that tube for many many days which is a

very uncomfortable thing actually and so

you know and so we need all of those

medications and we need them in pretty

large quantities and then of course you

know ventilators need to go into

intensive care units those intensive

care units require a lot of maintenance

I mean the cleaning staff to to clean a

intensive care unit where there’s been a

kovat positive patient in these our

larger rooms they have a lot of

equipment in it often the cleaning after

a Koba 19 patient to do it right and

disinfect that space so it’s safe for

the next patient that’s an hour and

twenty to thirty minute process or more

depending on the facility so or that

that room is just out of use and so I

mean there really is a complex team that

it takes in order to maintain an

intensive care unit around a single

machine it’s really hard to to convey

that all the time you know it’s a lot

easier to say we need the single

resource let’s manufacture it and get it

there and I will say to just this this

whole thing is really such an education

on public health messaging and how we

get ordinary people and policymakers to

kind of get galvanized around some of

these issues that are buried deep within

a hospital it’s like the deeper you get

into a hospital and the further you get

from outside of it the harder it is to

communicate these needs and so you know

testing was something that was very

relatable to people and that we were

really able to raise public outrage

about because everybody suddenly wanted

to get tested right I mean you had a

virus the the the the Cova 19 disease

was in the country you wanted to know

whether you had it and so if you didn’t

then something you knew really wanted

that test PPE the personal protective

equipment that was a little harder

that’s the first step into the hospital

what do you need if you’re working on

copa90 and you need some PPE and so and

there was something so visual about it

right we saw pictures of healthcare

workers with their masks and their

goggles and their gowns and and we saw

those images from other countries where

they were wearing them or not wearing

them you see the pictures on one of the

most vivid pictures I think that will

remain in people’s memories after this

is the pictures of the health care

workers with the bruises around their

faces for wearing these masks non-stop

because normally we don’t always wear

personal protective equipment for every

single patient but having to wear it for

patient after patient for hundreds of

patients over a shift people started to

get bruising on their faces and there

was something so visual and visceral and

relatable about that and so we got

people really excited about PPE and I’m

so glad because I think we won’t get

relief in those in that resource soon

after that our ability to kind of

communicate our needs are as critical as

they are they may be as critical as PPE

and as testing once you get downstream

to a stage of disease where you need to

be treated in the hospital it’s very

hard to communicate how badly we need

these things and get the kind of you

know the public interest and an outrage

and energy around it but really every

single thing that we need in the

hospital is is we’re starting to strain

the supply I’d love to

I fell in here yeah yeah please Helen so

many questions pouring into Facebook so

I’ll just share a couple and then I’ll

jump back off but I think overwhelming

made the number one question that people

have is how can they help alright I’m

sorry that question just kind of kills

me it kills me every time and you think

I’d be ready for it because how many

people are asking me so Oh give me a

second first of all everyone who asked

that question thank you I mean we feel

feel the outpouring of goodwill and and

I mean that is honestly what keeps us

going to work every single day and gives

us energy to do this and it actually it

makes me feel like how can I do more so

thank you and I will say there there are

a million ways to help I’ll throw it a

couple of simple things the first of all

whatever you do to help your own

community helps us so even if you’re not

out there I mean a lot of people are

selling face masks and things are

contributing to you know to the to

increasing the supply of PPE and that’s

wonderful but but it doesn’t have to be

that literal so when you contribute to

your local food bank your local homeless

or domestic violence shelter your local

diaper bank in any way contributing to

the needs of the community around here

you are helping us and I will tell you

even in times of pandemic we are seeing

people come to the hospital because they

are lacking food and they are lacking

shelter because those needs are still

paramount for people and so when you

help in those ways that is healthcare

that you are giving directly and you are

helping us every single day keep people

healthy so those things are so valuable

I think the second thing is to come into

the healthcare mentality which is that

this is not going to be short it is

going to be prolonged and there is no

single campaign that will win this thing

they’re going to be many campaigns after

campaigns and I always feel like I’m

giving bad news but I want people to

kind of spread the word that this needs

to be a really sustained effort we don’t

have an end date we may even have a

second surge of disease on particularly

if you don’t get this right we don’t

have a timing for things like vaccines

and effective treatments those things

simply take time so I would say take the

little breaks that you need to from

you’re helping roll help when you have

the energy and you know and the

resources to do so but also take time

for yourself but understand that this is

not going to be short and then the last

thing I would say is remember that

sometimes what we don’t do is as

important as what we do do and so people

are always worried that they haven’t

done enough but remember that restraint

is so important here and one example

I’ll give is every time there’s a whiff

of promise around a medication people

are going out and they are they are

trying to get people to prescribe it to

them they’re they’re filling these

prescriptions and in quantities that are

much higher than than anybody needs and

really there’s some medication hoarding

that’s going on so I would ask people

you know wait for the evidence and the

recommendations please let health

professionals guide how we use these

resources and and please don’t do the

toilet-paper thing for any resource in

healthcare we need to we need to have

enough restraint that the limited

resources we have yet to those who

really need them that goes for a number

of things also those you know hi Phil

tration facemasks some people in the

public do not need to be wearing those

and those should go directly to health

care workers one of the question and

then I’ll jump back into the comments

but even there’s a question around the

risk of using a drug for something it

wasn’t intended and I guess this is a

reference to Cora Queen which has become

a kind of a word that non-medical

professionals are now using liberally

but what do you make of the kind of the

sudden resurgence of people’s awareness

and knowledge of chloroquine and what

should we actually think about it yeah

there you know every time there is a

pandemic there are a number of

medications that have the

radical benefit because they have in

vitro action against against the virus

and there have been many disappointments

I mean all all these medications that

we’re talking about hydrochloric win and

as if through Meissen and antivirals

that are effective against different

viruses we wonder can it work against

this virus maybe the excitement about

these medications hydroxychloroquine i

think is the one that’s been mentioned

the most I mean really through the roof

I’m excited too it would be nice to know

if it works we have very little data on

these we have not been able to do these

randomized control trials that will

allow us to know not only are they

effective but is the is the good that

they’re doing does it exceed the harms

because all these medications have

potential toxicity on you know they have

psychiatric side effects they have

cardio toxicity particularly in

combination with other medications that

affect your heart they can cause very

serious illness seizures and even death

and we’ve seen we’ve seen an early death

from from the use of chloroquine so so a

lot of caution here in every sense there

is no indication for people to go out

and start using these medications as

either prophylaxis or treatment I’m

really worried about how people can hurt

themselves and advertently particularly

if they’re taking these outside the

recommendation of a health professional

I mean that’s just a nightmare waiting

to happen and I’ll also say I mean this

goes in line with with the issue of

medication shortages but I mean the the

treatment for hydroxychloroquine or

chloroquine overdoses is is generally

benzodiazepines which is another

medication that we’re in very short

supply of we need critically for

intensive care unit patients and so you

know everything has consequences that we

will then have to grapple with so not

you know unsupported you so these

medications this really has the

potential to be another disaster buried

within this disaster we do not want that

okay I’m jumping off thank you so much

back to you Whitney

Helen you know it’s so you talked about

sort of how you’ve been advocating for

PPE and our need for that and you

advocate for a lot of things in this

public health space that I think are

just really critically important at this

time and one of those things is the work

that you’re doing with chip health and

I’d love to talk a little bit about that

as far as looking at building emergency

health centers and creating these spaces

at this time and as we’re seeing that

hospitals are overcrowded throughout the

country the world you know I guess how

how long before we get to a point where

where we really are beyond capacity and

and need to seek out alternative

measures yeah we’re already seeing it in

New York and I think we will actually

see this space shortage in every major

city and then a different kind of space

shortage actually in rural and critical

access areas so you know in large cities

we’re running out of space in every

single cup you know if every single kind

so yes it is the intensive care units

and it’s the hospital wards and it’s a

space in the emergency department and

you’ve seen these I think you’ve seen

these pictures in in emergency medicine

triage where people packed in there like

sardines no doubt transmitting disease

while they’re waiting you know and so

some hospitals are bumping out to large

tents places where they can enforce try

to enforce social distancing while

people are waiting to be seen some of

them very sick but there’s also housing

needs around health care so increasingly

as we’re seeing many many very static

Ovid patients and particularly when you

add in that layer of inadequate PPE our

personal protective equipment um health

care workers are not wanting to go home

and that’s a very reasonable thing to

watch because we we want to we want to

shield our families as we do this I mean

a number of many many health care

workers I know are sick and have to go

into quarantine away from their families

and so where do we do that I mean

hospitals are only equipped to handle a

very small handful of health care

workers spending the night you know so

you go into any hospital in a regular

time in the

they’re empty at night and you just have

a tiny handful of physicians who are

required to stay in house overnight this

is to sleep there you know between

between daytime hours and so you’ll have

a couple of call rooms and now we have

this this situation where a large

portion of our healthcare staff does not

want to go home in between and so we’re

getting really generous offers I mean in

the in New York City for example the

Four Seasons offered its hotel rooms up

to up to health care workers who wanted

to stay there to keep their families

safe or to avoid the commute between

shifts and that’s great but you know

most hospitals aren’t lucky enough to be

next door to a luxury hotel where they

can spend a month and so how are we

pumping out housing in addition to all

the health care space we need and and so

that’s why I started working with this

amazing team it’s a project called Joop

health and we’re building three kinds of

units as fast as we can so this this

expanded housing for health care workers

and actually for other people who have

covin 19 or likely have codon koba 19

and cannot go back to their their living

situation for whatever reasons so you

think of people living in homeless

shelters domestic violence shelters

group homes nursing homes correctional

facilities psychiatric units basically

all these places that we’re calling

coronavirus traps because people are

held in there there is no option for

social distancing and the infection is

spreading like wildfire fire unless we

take known cases and actually pull them

out so expanded housing can be used for

any of those populations and then basic

hospital beds and then and then actually

these these mobile intensive care units

that are being designed with

architecture design teams engineering

teams and a whole bunch of health

professionals and also patients and

patient advocates and we’re trying to

make a very functional space that can be

shipped anywhere in the United States

very quickly there are hospitals in

remote areas that don’t have hundreds of

ICU beds that they can mobilize they

might have two ICU

but all of a sudden they’re not able to

transfer all the kovat patients that

they need to take care of and so we want

to see that their needs as well as we

see that the needs of people and very

densely populated areas that simply

don’t have room I mean I think the

reality is we can’t you know we can’t

run hospitals that have have endless

capacity for surge I mean that’s just

not something that you can build and

maintain so what are creative ways we

can we can do this we can create very

deployable extra space not just for this

crisis but but for every single other

one that we face moving forward and you

know when you think about these needs

for health workers and and just for the

broader community you know how much of

this is on the government and I you know

and I’m curious to hear I guess what you

feel like in thinking about this crisis

what the government has getting right

both on the federal state level and then

what are some of the areas that really

still need more attention yeah I mean I

I think it’s pretty fair to say that the

government response as a whole has been

disappointing

the biggest tragedy is that when that’s

those first cases came in the United

States that we didn’t get on top of the

testing that day not even that day the

month before when we knew that this was

starting to spread and it was clear this

was going to be a global pandemic it

really I find it hard to even think

about because I it’s so upsetting that

we didn’t just roll out testing encase

and contact identification very

assertively from the beginning I mean

that was the difference between what

will ultimately be hundreds of thousands

of lives lost and and and having saved

all those lives will be that early thing

and you know you’re psychologically it’s

so bad to dwell I’m trying not to dwell

on that first mistake but and really

just kind of move forward and say okay

how do we avoid that that that

and that’s kind of been where I’m trying

to push the conversation like okay

what’s the next thing you know it’s like

okay we’re kind of got behind testing we

still aren’t where we need to be with

testing but then then what you know what

are the other containment measures and

then when we get to the you know

downstream to the treatment everything’s

really about containment and then

treatment capacity and I I think

containment is where I really wanted to

focus and then it was like okay well we

because we failed in containment we

better shift quickly and think about

here escalation so how do we expand our

care capacity and it’s sad to me that’s

that’s where I need to be but since

we’re going to be doing large-scale care

what are all the little gaps that we

need to fill so and I think the really

hard thing I mean I’ve been involved in

in these organizations to try to improve

our PPE supply and the and I can you

know we’re all so many hundreds of

thousands of people are involved in this

and and I think we’re able to boost

supply here and there and and have have

some successes but what we can’t do what

is very hard to do on the grassroots

level is to centralize our understanding

of the problem I mean there should be in

an ideal world a national command center

that has its fingers on the pulse across

all 50 states that knows where are all

of our hospitals and health systems and

clinics what are their patient caseloads

like and what do they need of every

single resource whether it’s human

resources or or these concrete sees

these recent these supply resources and

then understands the national supply and

can divert resources exactly where they

need to go at the exact right time

including identifying places that are

getting over the you know the surge and

are able to reallocate to other places

where they’re just entering their surge

so that kind of centralized national

coordinating role is something that

we’re really missing here

and I think not only does it make it

hard for all of us to get the resources

we need but there’s real equity issues

here I

worried all the time about who is

getting the limited resources it’s

probably they’re really enriched out

systems that have a lot of political

power in their communities and you know

have already we’re kind of well

resourced going in they’re likely to get

more and smaller and less resource

places are simply not going to get the

attention the political will the the

voice do to get what they need and that

affects their their communities and so

there’s there’s huge inequities that are

going to be doubled down because we

don’t have a coordinated system that

that has some you know some structure in

place to make sure these decisions and

resources are equitably made Helen has

some got some more questions from online

I do I have overweening love for you and

gratitude but everything that you’re

doing and I have some questions too so

one is someone has five and ninety five

masks they want to donate them but

they’re not quite sure how to do that

how how can how can they help how can

they get those masks to you or to your

colleagues thank you

so most hospitals have listed drop-off

locations for n95 and ours and actually

have built methods for people to be able

to drive by not get out of your car and

risk yourself by coming into a health

care center but to be able to do it on

the outside with minimal contact and so

I would encourage you to to either call

your local hospital or health system

almost everybody has a kovat hotline set

up or the hospital operator can divert

you to it also if you go on some of

these coordinating websites the one I’m

involved with is called get us PPE org

we have by state a sorted list of

hospitals that are accepting PPE

donations including the address and

hours of drop-off so you can go right

there and hopefully find one that’s

close to you and then this is arguably a

more personal question so apologies in

advance but we’ve seen a really shocking

rise in anti-asian discrimination

through this and I just wonder what

message you have for pew

or who are turning inwards or who are

allowing their fear and anger to turn

outwards to another to another group if

you have any words of wisdom on that

yeah this is this is another one of

those collateral damage pieces that is

so disturbing with this virus I mean the

virus from the minute we were aware of

it came along with racism and hatred and

I am a part of many Asian American

communities and I mean the stories are

not mine to tell but I will tell you

that people have had very harrowing

harrowing experiences directed at them

and that their young children that are

clearly linked to fear of kovat 19

because you know people will explicitly

say things that that relate to the virus

and and why they’re people brought it

into this country and it’s a it’s a

terrible time and I don’t know what

advice I have except that we should all

be aware that it’s happening I have a

number of friends who said I didn’t see

it until you pointed it out and now it’s

it’s terribly obvious and so I think we

all I think just acknowledging it when

you see it even though you’re not the

target of it being really explicit that

this is not acceptable right now I think

people being the best allies they can be

because very hard in the moment when

you’re experiencing that kind of racism

to stand up for yourself or for your

family members so I think this is one of

those times where we really need people

to call it out and to tamp it down

quickly where they see it happening well

sit I mean it’s at this point of

collateral damage I know that you’ve

also talked to about some of the other

downstream medical effects that you’ve

seen that are not even connected to

people contracted the virus at all you

know you’ve talked about domestic

violence and I’d love to hear you I

guess address that a little bit more

just what what are you seeing as it

relates to those sorts of issues yeah

this is one thing that’s again been

traveling around my community my online

communities of physicians and nurse

is and this is only anecdotal now I

don’t have the data but I think it will

come as we as we look back but when you

put people into their homes 24/7 and and

when you do that in a very economically

stressful time where people are losing

their jobs and feeling a lot of stress

about just getting meals on the table I

mean that is a setting in which in which

family violence child abuse into their

partner violence will increase and we’re

seeing that in the hospital I mean I’ve

seen a number of cases where people fled

to the hospital because their home was

simply not safe and became abruptly more

not safe because of stay at home orders

I’ve seen young children harmed because

in their regular lives they could escape

to school for a good chunk of the day or

they had these extended communities of

family members and friends floating

around and then stay at home orders went

to place and everybody retreated into

their homes and there was no that

barrier that always was the difference

between safety and harm was suddenly

removed and family violence went up and

and truly I mean I am a violence

researcher I’m always very attuned to

the patients who come in who are

experiencing violence and I have never

seen anything like this before and and I

think you will never attach a cope of 19

diagnosis to this know no review of

medical records may really may really

attach this to cope in nineteen but I

consider this a very a very sad part of

the collateral damage that’s happening

directly because of this disease

and you know as we wrap up here I think

I’m sure that this is something that a

lot of folks out there are thinking

about too is just you know what is I

guess the the big takeaway what are the

the big things that we should know that

we should do the ensure that we can get

to what is whatever the best case

scenario is at this point yeah well I

would say to to give people a measure of

hope and optimism your little actions

are working so I know there’s nothing

glamorous about do nothing and

at home and I am so acutely aware of how

much people are sacrificing I mean

people are they’re sacrificing their

businesses their livelihood people who

are just on the edge of being a feeling

financially secure are just giving it

all up to stay at home you couldn’t ask

for a bigger sacrifice and yet those

things are working look at what’s

happening in Ohio in Oregon in other

states where we’re really able to get

ahead of this we are protecting

ourselves our family members and also

importantly our really vulnerable

members of society are our older

citizens by doing these things and doing

that sacrifice so I think while we’re

going through some really really tough

times in these hardest hit cities what

we’re what everyday people are doing in

response is really working so I think it

can feel futile I think sometimes to

just kind of sit quietly and do your

social distancing thing and nobody you

know there’s no glory in that and it’s

also can be incredibly boring I’m

learning looking online and seeing how

creative people are getting with their

dance moves and their bread recipes but

it really is also heroic work and it is

saving lives for sure so thank you to

everybody for for that simple act it’s

making everything better well thank you

dr. chu I think I speak for everyone and

how how much we appreciate you coming

spending time with us today

sharing your experiences and your wisdom

and knowledge Helen did you have any

last things that you wanted to share

only that it’s kind of you to try and

deflect but we all know who the heroes

are around here and it’s it’s pretty

okay to be able to sit on the sofa and

watch TV so thank you for everything

that you’re doing and just the deepest

appreciation and gratitude from

everybody who’s been watching from

everyone its head in from hell I’ll

speak for everyone in the world thank

you so much thank you dr. chu

嗨博士。 chu hey Whitney 你好吗,谢谢

你今天和我们在一起我很好,

非常感谢你让我参加你

知道我很清楚你

这些天全天候工作,所以这真的

很重要 你花了一些

时间和我们在一起,你知道我想我

问过你怎么样,但我

很想听听你真的知道我们的

事情进展如何你在

这些时候做得如何是的,我的意思是我个人

不能抱怨 你知道俄勒冈州现在不是

纽约,我们实际上已经采取

了很多早期的公共卫生措施,

并且在拉平曲线方面非常成功,

所以我当然是说

我们正在看到病例,这

是医疗保健领域独一无二的时期 真的

没有经历过这样的事情,你

知道我是这样一个由一线医护人员组成的大

社区的一

员,并与

我在全国和世界各地的朋友

们交谈 护理单位,

这是一个令人难以置信的

整个时间都很紧张,但是在俄勒冈州,我们很

幸运仍在等待

海浪袭击我们,而且你知道

在俄勒冈州提到这一点并没有

像其他一些州那样受到重创,但我想

你能 多谈谈

你在那里说的话,俄勒冈州

使曲线变平,并告诉我们

更多关于

那里的情况,然后在你的

医院,特别是我的意思

是美国的第一例病例

来到西雅图,距离我家只有

三个半小时的路程

俄勒冈州很快就开始感觉真实

,然后我们很早就

看到了我们在

整个美国

看到的

模式 n 西雅图,案件

真的爆炸了,我们

非常认真地对待我们的居家令,你

知道,所以学校很

早就关闭了,人们

一直在努力遵守居家建议

,我们看到了 加倍时间

开始延长,

我们的医院

对重症监护病房基地和

呼吸机的床位需求的预测开始下降,

直到您看到我们可能

会在我们拥有的资源范围内

在我们的州

,这很棒,本周早些时候,

您知道俄勒冈州能够

将 140 台呼吸机送到纽约市

,试图帮助他们满足

危机时期的需求,所以您知道

我们仍处于阶段

州与州之间的情况非常不同,我的

意思是猫

在华盛顿和纽约的某些州有点出类拔萃,

但许多其他州仍然

有机会改变他们的

命运 o 这真的是一场日常的战斗

,以确保我们留在游戏中

,并且我们继续

对所有公共卫生措施保持警惕,

甚至升级努力,

以便我们能够克服困难并

到达 我的意思是这件事的另一面,

听到

事情似乎进展得很顺利,

或者进展得很好,而且你

知道我很好奇我在谈论

你提到的那些其他州,

可能是 我

知道你和这个国家其他

地方的很多同事都有联系

我的意思是要

了解紧急护理和灾难

响应系统这就是我们

所知道的,这不像我们在

假设正常情况下运行,你知道

我们总是在为

最坏的情况做计划,所以我们正在 我们已

为灾难做好准备,但不 t normal

quote-unquote 正常的灾难

比这更受控制,

所以你知道我们已经准备好应对地震

飓风其他国家自然

灾害或者可能是单一的大规模

伤亡所有这些事情

都有更多更多的种类

对他们来说,你知道这些离散事件

可能会影响一个城市或一个

地区,或者你知道你处于

其他州或地区可以

介入的位置我的意思是你在

我们的一些最大的灾难之后看到了像 9 /11

其他国家非常

愿意在我们

解决我们的善后问题方面提供帮助,这是

应该提供帮助的地方之一,

因为我们都

在同时处理这个问题,并且

所以每个人要么全神贯注,你

知道他们就像在纽约市一样

这些有限的资源

让我们拥有一切,从个人

防护设备到药物

、空间、呼吸机和医护人员,

再到处于全面

准备模式,这

就是我们现在在俄勒冈州的情况,因为

我们的高峰期预计将 在

4 月底或 5 月初袭击,所以我们正在

利用这段宝贵的时间来试图

弄清楚

我们将如何应对这种激增,所以

无论波浪是否已经袭击

或即将袭击 每个人

都在围绕这场大流行 24/7 全天候工作

,你知道,当我想到

紧急救援人员时,甚至在这段时间之前,

你知道我总是想着他们

,就像你知道那种

混乱的疯狂空间,你知道我

已经提到过

最近几周可能发生了一些变化

,所以你能谈谈

你现在的日常经历

与他们本来的样子相比吗?

他们就像

大流行前一样,是的,我会一次又一次地

谈论

我从你所知道的任何地方听到的医护人员的经历,

而不仅仅是我的

个人,呃,但是

这个有两个部分是正常的 有时

我们经营的医院非常精简,你知道,所以

我们不经营它,所以你

走进一个轮班,你可以

放松一半,你知道,或者我们

有一堆空床 案例

我的意思是你一直运行它非常接近

最大化因为我们真的

运行它是为了财务效率你知道

所以医院越来越满

我们没有扩大医院病房我们

真的运行它们非常接近 到了

高峰期,在急诊室,

我在正常的一天,比如说周末

夜班,当急诊室医生

走进或急诊室护士走进来时,

你会停下来深呼吸,

因为你知道你会

为您的整个班次基本上全力以赴不间断地运行

八到十二个小时

或其他任何时间,因此在正常

情况下,我的意思是您感觉

非常接近最大容量,然后

再加上大流行病,您

会想到自己最糟糕的一天

以及在他们发生的地方 已经点击

搜索它是常规的两倍或三倍

或五倍或十倍,所以

你离开它从来都不是一份轻松的

工作

一直在做更多

的事情,只是试图

保证人们的安全——真的——真的,你

知道比这更高的几个数量级

,所以受到重创的地方真的

不可能很忙,然后

另一方面,我们真的做到了

在公共

信息和通过卫生系统的信息方面做了大量工作

,如果你病得不是很严重,你应该

远离,因为首先我们

需要照顾这些 kovat 19 患者,

而且你不想生病

来这里是因为 这就是

Cova 19 患者来的地方,所以为了您

自己和家人的安全,

请远离,因此即使是

患有非常严重健康

状况的人也要远离

,我们在急诊室的病例

量实际上非常不同,所以我们 “

不成比例地看到发烧的病人,

你知道呼吸道疾病的症状

可能在 19 岁就可以应付,但几乎

所有其他的东西都已经消失或

下降

了 回家后,

他们不会去派对、酒吧、

餐馆或那些你可能会

喝很多酒然后惹上麻烦的地方

,所以周五晚上

周六晚上的创伤很多,我们

通常会看到

酒后驾车或高处造成的车祸 交通

状况 我的意思

是当你把一大群

人放在一起时发生的所有事情,尽管

那是我们的面包 和黄油

在急诊室里,我们没有看到

那么多,令人费解的

事情实际上是为什么我们

在 19 次 imeem 心脏病中风中没有看到与 Cove 无关的东西

这些疾病没有得到任何

通知 应该等到

科瓦特结束你知道,所以那些疾病在哪里

我的意思是前

几天纽约时报有一篇专栏文章

想知道那些有非常

正当理由进入

医院的人是否也在避免避开

房子但是 并不是说其他事情不

合法,而是您

知道我们应该立即看到的真正紧急情况,

否则可能会导致

非常糟糕的结果甚至在短时间内死亡

您知道

我们正在看到什么样的附带损害

因为人们害怕进来,

但所有这些都在医院里造成了一个非常

奇怪的环境,

是的,我的意思是,

这听起来很有趣

就像在某些方面,人们

对他们何时

需要寻求护理

以及何时可以自己处理事情变得更加深思熟虑

,我和我想

,人们在

网上处理某些事情是否更好,这可能还有待观察 他们自己在家里,

或者更糟糕的是,您对此有何

看法,可能两者兼而有之 我的

意思是我认为事实就在

中间

恢复正常,但可能当我们回到正常状态时,我们

不会看到我们学到的一些东西可以

远离急诊室,或者你

知道我认为我们现在在远程医疗方面非常有

创意,我正在

让人们得到

通过他们的电脑或手机进行医疗保健

,我想我们可能会发现,

在此之后我们继续扩大

远程医疗的使用,因为

运作良好 对于一些常见的健康状况,您可以在家中做这些事情,

但我

也认为,当每个州的激增结束时

,我们将涌入

那些延迟的护理病例,这

将是医疗保健系统的第二次压力激增,

而不是 直接评级

与代码 19 相关,但

我们称之为附带损害 我是

延迟的健康问题,这些健康问题确实

可以从早期

访问医院急诊室

或亲自访问您的医生到您的

医生或 执业护士或

您认识的任何人随着几个月的过去

,您知道我们

作为一个国家和世界一直在处理这个

问题 或者更糟的是,

您知道现在的情况

与 2 月初所说的有什么不同

我的意思是现在我们在其中我的意思

是我们所有人在某种程度上我的意思是它已经袭击了

所有 50 个州,所以它从这个

预期变成了重新 盟友需要做出

那些艰难的决定,我的意思是这

总是很有挑战性,但在这种

疾病中,我们并不熟悉它,

所以我们正在快速学习,所以我们正在

向中国学习、意大利、

韩国,然后是我们的 拥有早期的

州,但决策变化

如此之快,以至于

有时我觉得我

在轮班结束时走出

的医院与

我在轮班开始时走进的医院不同,我 我

从各地的同事那里听到这个消息,

不仅仅是在我

所在的机构,你

知道我们已经创建了这些 COBIT

紧急工作组或委员会,

为每个卫生系统做出决策

,人们坐在那里并接收

数据 滚进来,然后使用这些

数据来丰富他们自己机构的响应,

所以无论我是

想想一个很好的例子,比如

我们决定围绕棕色口罩做些什么,

还是围绕我们如何做 了解

某些类型的患者 哪些

药物被视为潜在

疗法 我的意思是这就是几周前

在这场大流行的早期,我们担心

一种

叫做 AR B 的血管紧张素

受体阻滞剂的血压药物和 谣言

是这些是有害的,

实际上会导致更严重的疾病,

还有一个问题是我们是否

应该让患者停止

使用这些药物来

控制血压 3 周后,这些

药物正在用于 医院

作为一种潜在的治疗方法 我的意思是

一门科学的变化速度有多快 它曾经

很糟糕

现在它可能真的很好

我只想

告诉你,你总是想知道我

现在是不是弄错了,因为我

觉得大约 24 小时后情况会有所不同,

而你只是尽力而为 我的意思是,您

可以根据当前信息很好

地记录您的

经历,并且在谈论

您如何度过这场

大流行以及您的新播客医生的

日志,并且您知道您已经谈论了

一些

卫生工作者所面临

的独特挑战之一

对卫生工作者来说,是的,

这压力太大

了 工作场所,因为

我们一直看到的东西的波动性

,所以你们中有些人知道

肾上腺素总是

存在的,随着时间的推移,我们已经习惯了

盟友

对其中一些

不属于其他人日常生活的事情完全是个

书呆子,但是有了这个,我们就有了一种你

知道的疾病,这种疾病具有高度的

传染性,而且会导致

非常严重的疾病,所以你 知道

然后你把这一个简单的资源的短缺扔在那里,

这是

个人防护设备,当

你把这三样东西放在一起,

我们看到了大量的病人

,你知道这真的会

在不同的层面上变得压力大

因为我们很少会在医院里看到一些东西

,我们不得不担心我要

带什么回家给我的家人,

因为我没有完全保护我

免受这种非常危险的疾病的侵害,

我认为当你加上那层

个人压力时 是时候

做我喜欢做的事来

照顾病人了,我是不是让我的家人

处于危险之中

我是否让其他病人处于危险之中

我的同事处于危险之中

在整个大流行中,从运动上抽干这一切,

不仅是不能自由地

进入,只是尽你最大的潜力去做你的临床职责,

而且还有一层关于你能做到多少的持续压力。

安全地去做是的,我的意思是,

全世界都在看到这些

关于感染病毒的卫生工作者数量的头条新闻

,你知道

这种事情真的很令人不安

,你知道,谢谢医生,

你所做的一切都是真的,我想

您谈论的另一件事,您知道并且也在

考虑您提到没有

个人防护装备,还有其他设备,我们

在头条新闻中看到了很多

我们在医院

缺乏的设备是您谈到的呼吸机短缺

这以及如何

仅仅考虑呼吸机本身是不够的,

但您知道

当我们考虑

医疗中心对呼吸机的需求

时,我们还需要考虑哪些其他因素 ospitals 是的,需求

是如此之大,它真的

是你所知道的一切它是

围绕着呼吸机的一切,你知道这是

它,这些东西都不是

孤立存在的,你知道,所以当我

想到呼吸机的问题时,嗯

,我们 用完就好了

,您实际上需要训练有素的

员工来使用呼吸机,这不像

您可以随便带任何人,只需将

他们放在呼吸机旁边,他们就可以

开始以您精通所有技能的超级幻想对其进行编程

信心,你知道我们依靠这样一个

事实,即有训练有素的

劳动力,包括呼吸

治疗师重症监护室

训练有素的医生护士

,他们在 ICU 护理方面非常有经验,

甚至可以让某人使用呼吸机,你

需要一些常用

药物 约会并麻痹他们,这样他们

就可以忍受将一根相当

坚硬的塑料管插入他们的喉咙,

然后让他们保持在一个状态 很

舒服,所以他们可以

在管子上呆很多天,这实际上是一件

非常不舒服的事情,所以

你知道,所以我们需要所有

这些药物,我们需要

大量的药物,当然你

知道呼吸机需要 进入

重症监护病房那些重症

监护病房需要大量维护

我的意思是清洁人员要清洁

重症监护病房,

在我们

更大的房间里有一个科瓦特阳性患者,他们里面有很多

设备,通常是之后的清洁

一名 Koba 19 患者做正确的事并对

那个空间进行消毒,这样

下一个患者就可以安全了

是一个复杂的团队

,为了

在一台机器周围维护一个重症监护室,

很难一直传达

这一点,你知道

说我们需要它要容易得多 他的单一

资源让我们制造它并到达

那里,我会说这

整件事真的是

关于公共卫生信息的教育,以及我们如何

让普通民众和政策

制定者围绕其中一些

被埋没的问题进行激励

在医院的深处,就像

你进入医院越深,离医院越远

传达这些需求就越困难,所以

你知道测试是

与人们非常相关的事情,我们

真的能够做到 引起公众

愤怒,因为每个人

突然都想接受正确的检测

测试 PPE 个人防护

装备 稍微难

一点 这是进入医院的第一步

如果你在做

copa90 你需要什么,你需要一些 PPE 等等 d

有一些非常直观的东西,

我们看到了

医护人员戴着口罩、

护目镜和长袍的照片,我们看到了

来自其他国家/地区的那些

他们戴或不戴

它们的照片,你可以看到其中一张照片上的照片

最生动的照片我想这之后会

留在人们记忆

中的是医护人员

不停地戴着这些口罩,脸上有瘀伤的照片,

因为通常我们并不总是

为每个病人都佩戴个人防护设备,

但 不得不

为数百名

患者在轮班期间一个接一个地佩戴它,人们

的脸上开始出现瘀伤,并且

有一些如此视觉、内脏和

相关的东西,所以我们让

人们对 PPE 感到非常兴奋,我

很高兴 因为我认为我们不会

很快从那些资源中的人那里得到解脱,

因为

我们沟通需求的能力与它们一样重要

可能与 PPE 和测试一样重要,

一旦您进入

需要在医院接受治疗的疾病阶段,

很难传达我们对

这些东西的需求程度,并让您

了解公众利益和

围绕它的愤怒和能量,但实际上

我们在医院需要的每一件事

是我们开始紧张

我想要的供应

分享一些,然后我会

跳回去,但我认为压倒性

使人们遇到的第一个问题

是他们如何提供帮助,我很

抱歉,这个问题

让我很生气,每次都让我很生气,你认为

我 我要做好准备,因为有多少

人在问我所以哦,首先请给我

第二个问

这个问题的每个人,谢谢我的意思是我们

感受到了善意的流露,

我的意思是说实话,这就是让我们

继续工作的原因 每一天,给

我们有精力去做这件事,它实际上

让我觉得我该怎么做才能做得更多,所以

谢谢你,我会说有

一百万种方法可以帮助我,首先不管你做什么,我都会给它

一些简单的东西

帮助你自己的

社区帮助我们,所以即使你

不在那里,我的意思是很多人都在

卖口罩,而且事情正在

为你做出

贡献 不必

是字面上的,所以当您为

当地的食物银行捐款时,您当地的无家可归者

或家庭暴力庇护所您当地的

尿布银行以任何方式为

附近社区的需求做出贡献,

您正在帮助我们,我

什至会告诉您 我们看到

人们来医院是因为

他们缺乏食物,他们缺乏

住所,因为这些需求

对人们来说仍然是最重要的,所以当你

以这些方式提供帮助时,这

就是你直接提供的医疗保健,你就是

每天都在帮助我们保持人们的

健康,所以这些东西

非常有价值 赢得这件事,

他们将在竞选之后进行许多

竞选,我总是觉得我在

传递坏消息,但我希望人们

传播这样的信息,这

需要真正持续的努力,我们

没有结束 日期我们甚至可能会出现

第二次疾病激增,特别是

如果您没有做好这一点,我们

没有时间进行疫苗

和有效治疗之类的事情,这些事情

只是需要时间,所以我会

说您需要稍作休息

当你

有精力并且你知道和

资源这样做时,你正在帮助滚动帮助,但也要

为自己花时间,但要明白这

不会很短,然后我要说的最后一

件事是记住

有时 什么

我们不做的事情和我们做的事情一样重要,所以人们

总是担心他们

做得不够,但请记住,克制

在这里非常重要,

我要举的一个例子是每当有

一丝承诺时 围绕一种药物,

人们出去了,他们

试图让人们给

他们

开处方

所以我会问

你认识的人等待证据和

建议请让卫生

专业人员指导我们如何使用这些

资源并且请不要

我们需要的医疗保健中的任何资源做卫生纸我们需要有

足够的克制

我们还没有为那些真正需要它们的人提供有限的资源,这些资源

可以用于

许多事情,还有那些你知道的人,嗨,Phil

tration 口罩,公众中的一些人

不需要戴

那些 d 这些应该直接问卫生

保健工作者一个问题,

然后我会跳回到评论中,

但即使有一个问题是

关于将药物用于

非预期用途的风险,我想这

是对 Cora Queen 已经成为

非医学

专业人士现在广泛使用

的一种词,但是你如何看待人们对氯喹

的认识和知识的突然复苏,

我们应该怎么想,是的

,你知道的 每次发生

大流行时,都会有许多

药物具有

根本性的好处,因为它们具有

抗病毒的体外作用,

并且有很多令人失望的地方

通过

对不同病毒有效的迈森和抗病毒药物,

我们想知道它能否对抗

这种病毒,也许是对

这些药物的兴奋

think 是被

提及最多的一个我的意思是真的通过屋顶

我也很兴奋很高兴

知道它是否有效我们对此的数据非常少

我们无法进行这些

随机对照试验

我们不仅要知道它们是否

有效,而且

它们的好处是否超过了危害,

因为所有这些药物

对您都有潜在的毒性,您知道它们具有

精神副作用,它们具有

心脏毒性,特别是

与其他药物结合使用时

影响您的心脏 它们可能导致非常

严重的疾病癫痫发作甚至死亡

,我们已经看到我们已经看到

因使用氯喹而过早死亡,所以

在各个方面都非常谨慎,

没有迹象表明人们要外出

并开始使用这些药物

作为预防或治疗我

真的很担心人们会如何伤害

自己,特别是

如果他们在推荐范围之外服用这些药物

我的意思是,这只是一场等待发生的噩梦

,我还要说我的意思是这

与药物短缺的问题一致,

但我的意思是

羟氯喹或

氯喹过量的治疗通常是

苯二氮卓类药物,即 另一种

我们非常短缺的药物,

我们急需

重症监护病房的病人,所以你

知道一切都会有后果,我们

将不得不应对,所以

你不知道没有支持,所以这些

药物真的有

可能成为 这场灾难中埋藏的另一场灾难,

我们不希望这样,

好吧,我要跳下去,

非常感谢你惠特尼

·海伦,你知道,所以你谈到

了你一直在倡导

PPE 以及我们对此的需求以及你

在这个

公共卫生领域倡导很多我认为

目前非常重要

的事情,其中之一

就是你正在做的工作 芯片健康,

我很想谈一谈,

就目前建立紧急

医疗中心和创造这些空间而言

,当我们看到世界

各地的医院人满为患时,

你知道我猜怎么

在我们达到

真正超出能力

并需要寻找替代

措施的地步之前,是的,我们已经在纽约看到了这种情况

,我认为我们实际上会

在每个主要城市看到这种空间短缺

,然后是

实际上在农村和关键

通道地区存在不同类型的空间短缺,因此您知道在大城市中,

我们每个杯子的空间都用完了,

您知道是否每种都没有,

所以是的,它是重症监护室

,是医院病房,它是

急诊科的一个空间,

你已经看到了这些我想你已经

在急诊医学

分诊中看到了这些照片,人们像沙丁鱼一样挤在那里,

毫无疑问

,他们正在传播疾病 你知道的,所以

一些医院正在寻找大型

帐篷,在那里他们可以强制执行

尝试在人们等待看病时强制保持社交距离

其中一些人病得很重,但

医疗保健方面的住房需求也越来越多,

正如我们所看到的 许多非常静态的

Ovid 患者,特别是当您

加上 PPE 不足的那层时,我们的

个人防护设备 um

医护人员不想回家

,这是一件非常值得

关注的事情,因为我们想要

保护我们的家人 当我们这样做时,我的意思

是我认识的许多医疗保健

工作者生病了,不得不

远离家人进行隔离

,所以我们在哪里做,我的意思是

医院只能处理

极少数的医疗保健

工作人员在你知道的晚上过夜,所以

你会定期去任何一家医院,

因为

他们晚上是空的,你只有

少数医生

需要 待在家里过夜,这

在白天之间睡在那里,所以你

会有几个呼叫室,现在我们

遇到这种情况,

我们的大部分医护人员

不想在这两者之间回家,而且 所以我们

得到了非常慷慨的报价,我的意思

是在纽约市,例如,

四季酒店

希望留在那里以确保家人

安全或避免在轮班之间通勤的医护人员提供最多的酒店房间

和 太好了,但是你知道

大多数医院都没有幸运地

毗邻一家豪华酒店,他们

可以在那里度过一个月,所以

除了我们需要的所有医疗保健空间之外,我们如何抽出住房,

这就是为什么我 开始与这个

了不起的团队合作,这是一个名为 Joop health 的项目

,我们正在

尽可能快地建造三种单位,因此这

扩大了医疗保健工作者的住房

,实际上是为其他拥有

covin 19 岁或以上的人 伊利有密码子 koba 19

,无论出于何种原因都无法回到他们的生活

状态,所以你会

想到住在无家可归者

收容所的人 家庭暴力庇护所

集体之家 疗养院 惩教

设施 精神病院 基本上

所有这些我们称之为

冠状病毒陷阱的地方,因为人们 被

关押在那里没有

社会距离的选择,并且感染正在

像野火一样蔓延,除非我们

采取已知病例并将其实际

拉出,以便扩大的住房可以用于

这些人群中的任何一个,然后是基本的

医院床位,然后实际上

这些移动重症监护

病房正在与

建筑设计团队工程

团队和一大群健康

专业人员以及患者和

患者倡导者一起设计,我们正在努力

打造一个非常实用的空间,可以

在美国任何地方运输

很快就有

偏远地区的医院没有数百个

重症监护室 他们可以动员的床位 他们

可能有两个 ICU

但突然之间他们无法

转移

他们需要照顾的所有 kovat 患者,因此我们

希望看到他们的需求以及我们

看到的需求 人口和

人口稠密的地区

根本没有空间我的意思是我认为

现实是我们不能你知道我们不能

经营那些拥有无限

激增能力的医院我的意思是这

不是你可以建造的东西 并

保持如此我们可以采取哪些创造性的方式

我们可以做到这一点我们可以创造非常

可部署的额外空间,不仅是为了这场

危机,而且是为了

我们未来面临的每一个其他危机,

当你想到卫生工作者的这些需求时,你就会知道

只是为了

更广泛的社区,你知道这有

多少是在政府身上,我你知道

,我很想知道你

在思考这场危机时的感受

,政府

在联邦州一级都做得对 和

那么有哪些领域

确实需要更多关注是的,我的意思是我

认为可以说

政府的整体反应令人

失望,最大的悲剧是当

美国出现第一批病例时

,我们

那天甚至前一个月的那一天都没有完成测试,

当时我们知道这

开始蔓延,很明显

这将成为一场全球大流行,

我真的很难

去想,因为 令人沮丧的是,

我们并没有从一开始就非常自信地推出测试外壳

和联系人识别

,我的意思

是,

最终将失去数十万人

的生命与挽救

所有这些生命之间的区别在于 早期的事情

,你知道你在心理上

太糟糕了,我试图不去纠缠

于第一个错误,但真的

只是向前走,说好吧

,我们如何避免这种情况 这

就是我

试图推动对话的

地方 你知道什么

是其他遏制措施,

然后当我们

到达治疗下游时,一切

都与遏制和

治疗能力有关

我们遏制失败了,我们

最好迅速转变并考虑

这里的升级,所以我们如何扩大我们的

护理能力,这对我来说很难过,

这就是我需要的地方,但既然

我们将进行大规模的护理,

那么所有这些都是什么? 我们

需要填补的小空白,我认为

我的意思是我

参与这些组织以试图改善

我们的 PPE 供应,而且我

知道我们都有数

十万 s 人参与其中,

我认为我们能够在

这里和那里增加供应,并且

取得了一些成功,但我们不能做的

是在基层很难做到的

是集中我们

对 问题 我的意思是,在

一个理想的世界里,应该有一个国家指挥中心,掌握

所有 50 个州的脉搏,知道我们所有

的医院、卫生系统和

诊所在哪里,他们的患者病例数量

是多少,他们需要什么

无论是人力

资源还是这些具体

资源,查看这些最近的这些供应资源,

然后了解国家供应,并

可以在正确的时间将资源准确地转移到他们

需要去的

地方,包括

确定正在克服的地方 激增

并能够重新分配到

他们刚刚进入激增的其他地方,

因此这种集中的国家

协调角色是

我们真正的东西 你在这里失踪了

,我认为这不仅让

我们所有人都难以获得我们需要的资源

,而且这里还有真正的公平问题

一直担心谁

得到了有限的资源,

可能他们真的丰富了

系统 在他们的社区中拥有很大的政治

权力并且你知道

我们已经有足够的

资源进入他们可能会获得

越来越小和越来越少资源的

地方根本不会

引起政治意愿的关注

声音做得到他们需要的东西,这

会影响他们的社区,因此

存在巨大的不平等,

这将加倍,因为我们

没有一个协调的系统

,有一些你知道的

结构来确保这些决定 和

资源是公平的 海伦

还有一些问题来自网上

一种是有人有五个和九十五个

口罩,他们想捐赠它们,但

他们不太确定该

怎么做 列出

了 n95 和我们的下车地点,实际上

已经建立了一些方法,让人们能够

通过不下车并

冒险进入医疗

保健中心来开车,但能够

在外面以最少的方式进行 联系,所以

我鼓励你打电话给

你当地的医院或卫生系统

被称为获取我们的个人防护装备组织,

我们按州列出了

接受个人防护装备捐赠的医院的分类列表,

包括地址和

下车时间,因此您可以直接去

那里,希望找到

离您最近的一家,然后这是争论 这是一个

更私人的问题,所以提前道歉,

但我们已经看到

反亚裔歧视

通过这个令人震惊的上升,我只是想知道

你对皮尤有什么信息,

或者谁正在转向内心,或者

谁让他们的恐惧和愤怒转向

如果

您对此有任何智慧的话,可以向外传播

到另一个群体 和仇恨,

我是许多亚裔美国人

社区的一员,我的意思是这些故事

不是我要讲的,但我会告诉你

,人们对他们有过非常

悲惨的经历

,他们的孩子

显然与恐惧有关 kovat 19

因为你知道人们会明确地

说出与病毒有关的事情,

以及为什么人们将病毒

带到这个国家,这是一个

可怕的时期,我不知道

我有什么建议除了我们都

应该意识到它正在发生

你看到它时,即使你

不是它的目标,也明确表示

现在这是不可接受的,我认为

人们是最好的盟友,

因为在

你经历那种种族主义的那一刻

很难 为你自己或你的家人挺身而出,

所以我认为这是

我们真正

需要人们大声疾呼并迅速压制

它的时候之一

知道您

还谈到了

您所见过的其他一些下游医疗影响

,这些影响甚至与

感染病毒的人无关

我猜 更详细

地说明一下您所看到的

与这些问题有关的内容是的,

这是再次

在我的社区中传播的一

件事 有数据,但我

认为当我们回顾过去时,当您

将人们 24/7 全天候地安置在家中时,并且

当您在经济

压力非常大的时期这样做时,人们正在

失去工作并感到压力很大时,它就会出现

关于只是在餐桌上吃饭 我的

意思是在这种情况下,

家庭暴力将儿童虐待成他们的

伴侣暴力将会增加,我们

在医院看到这种情况 我的意思是我

看到了许多人们

逃到 医院,因为他们的家

根本不安全,并且由于居家令而突然变得更加

不安全

我见过年幼的孩子受到伤害,因为

在他们的正常生活中,他们可以

在一天的大部分时间里逃到学校,或者

他们让这些由

家庭成员和朋友组成的扩展社区

四处游荡,然后呆在家里命令

下达,每个人都撤退到

自己的家中,没有

那个总是

安全与伤害之间的区别的障碍突然

消失了,家庭暴力上升了

真的,我的意思是我是一名暴力

研究人员 知道没有审查

医疗记录可能真的可能真的

附上这个来应付十九,但我

认为这是直接由于这种疾病而发生的附带损害的一个非常非常可悲的部分,

你知道,当我们在这里结束时,我想

我是 肯定这也是

很多人都在考虑

的事情,只是你知道什么是我

猜最大的收获是什么

是我们应该做的大事 知道

我们应该确保我们能够

达到目前最好的

情况是的,是的,我

想说给人们一些

希望和乐观,你的小行动

正在起作用,所以我知道没有什么

迷人之处 什么都不做,

在家里,我非常清楚有

多少人正在牺牲我的意思

是人们正在牺牲他们的

业务他们的生计

那些刚刚处于

财务安全边缘的人只是

放弃一切留下来 在家里,您不能

要求更大的牺牲,但这些

事情正在发挥

作用 真正脆弱

的社会成员是我们的年长

公民,他们做了这些事情并做出

了牺牲,所以我认为,当我们

在这些受灾最严重的城市经历一些非常艰难的时期时 s

我们每天人们所做的

回应确实有效,所以

我认为有时会感到徒劳 我认为

只是安静地坐下来做你的

社交疏远事情,而你

认识的任何人都没有这样做没有荣耀,它

也可以 太无聊

了 一切都好,谢谢

博士。 楚我想我代表每个人,

我们非常感谢你

今天与我们共度时光,

分享你的经验,你的智慧

和知识海伦,你有什么

最后的事情想要分享,

只是你试着

转移注意力,真是太好了 但是我们都知道这里的英雄是谁,

能够坐在沙发

上看电视是很正常的,所以感谢你所做的一切

,以及所有一直在观看的人的最深切的

感谢和感谢

它来自地狱我会

为世界上的每个人说话,

非常感谢你,谢谢博士。 楚