Inside a NYC Hospital Coronavirus Unit During the Pandemic – The New York Times

There is little respite for the nurses working with coronavirus patients at N.Y.U. Langone Health.

Inside the recently opened Kimmel Pavilion in Manhattan, hundreds of patients rest in rooms designed to minimize infection. When the nurses do take a break, a soundtrack of wailing sirens reminds them what lies ahead on their return.

On March 10, N.Y.U.s medical center had just two coronavirus patients. Today, patients are spread over every floor of both Kimmel and nearby Tisch Hospital, said Robert Magyar, a hospital spokesman. The medical staff is weary, but many said they were relieved to have the supplies and protective gear that are in short supply at so many other institutions.

There are days where you feel great and ready to conquer the world, and there are days where you break down and feel really vulnerable, said Gabrielle Barshay, a senior staff nurse at Kimmel whose floor was the first to accept coronavirus patients. Its just difficult seeing these patients. A lot of them are alone, and they dont have their families. Sometimes its a lot of burden on one nurse.

For now, this tight-knit group of mostly 20-something nurses has each other, sharing the emotional burden of working, hoping and waiting.

These interviews have been edited for length and clarity.

It feels like a year already, like one long day thats never-ending.

Ive never had more anxiety in my entire four years of nursing. I feel like Im a new nurse again. Youre constantly on edge, your adrenaline is always pumping, you really dont know whats going to happen next. Overall, I think were just scared.

I change into normal clothes when I leave work, which I never did before. Now I wont even bring my scrubs inside my house. They literally sit in my backyard and they go to a laundromat. I dont even wash my scrubs inside my house anymore. I dont even wear the same shoes home, my shoes from work stay at work.

When people are visibly scared of us because were nurses, its kind of upsetting. Its hard because you kind of get where theyre coming from. But at the same time were putting our lives at risk everyday and were doing our best we can for you. Its a little insulting.

The patients have panic in their eyes.Meghan Curtin, 25, senior staff nurse

I have not seen my dad, who is diabetic, ever since our unit became Covid. Its scary knowing that with my direct exposure, I could potentially be inflicting this virus on one of my family members who would get really sick from it. I think its a tough spot to put anyone in.

The patients have panic in their eyes. Along with the anxiety that comes with not being able to have adequate oxygen and breathe, comes that panic of them saying, Am I going to die? Am I ever going to see my family again? Its very emotional for them and for us.

To think about having to have this lifestyle for a full year, it would be very difficult.

I try to numb my feelings as much as I can and honestly just focus on work.Vicky Jang, 26, senior staff nurse

I do hear concerns about racism from my mom and my dad especially. When this whole thing started and they were hearing all these stories about racism that was happening in the subways and the streets, they were more afraid of that than the infection itself. Which kind of prevented them from stepping outside.

My family and their friends, their community of Korean-Americans, are essential workers. They open up the laundromats and the dry cleaners in the city. So they have to go to work, they have to take public transportation, and they get dirty looks from all these people.

At this point Im just trying to numb my feelings. My brain is so focused on work that I dont have the capacity in myself to think about the future of how Im dealing with it in my home. I try to numb my feelings as much as I can and honestly just focus on work.

I cant just give up on being a nurse, and this is the time that they need us.Christine Ziobro, 38, senior staff nurse

I have four kids I have to go home to. I cant be separated. Im still breastfeeding my daughter, and its a lot of wear and tear on my body on top of me working the night shift taking care of these really sick patients. And Im worn out, but I have to keep going. I cant just give up on being a nurse.

This morning a patient was really sick, and shes dying alone and here I have to make the choice of whether or not I take an extra 10 minutes in the room with my P.P.E. on holding her hand, or just letting her die alone. Im a nurse for 12 years now. It didnt sit well with me to have her die alone and not have any family near her. Its been a really hard thing for a lot of us. These patients are really on their own and theyre counting on the nurses and doctors to make decisions for them.

I dont ever really cry because were taught to separate work and family. But sometimes it just gets [to be] too much. This morning I looked up and the doctor resident was bawling, crying in his mask, and I started crying and the other nurse started crying. Were all human, you know, theres only so much we can take.

This is something that is going to define who we are as health care workers in this generation.Steven Cabrera, 28, assistant nurse manager

The Covid-19 pandemic is our generations defining moment.

The mood quickly changed from this is a health scare to this is something that is going to define who we are as health care workers in this generation. We knew that this was going to become a war. It is kind of, in a mental sense, a war, because it really has become something that day in and day out is a battle to keep these patients safe and keep them healthy from such an aggressive virus.

While at one end were stressed, were anxious, were working our hardest to keep people safe and stable, the reflective part of me says, once this is said and done we can say that we were part of a collective force that overcame something huge. We were the ones that answered the call.

Each day you come in and the protocol has changed.Jessica Riney, 26, staff nurse

I was there the first day. It was my first day back from vacation. It was very hard, because this is not something weve dealt with before. As a new nurse, its very scary each time you get something youve never had before. As you go on, you kind of get your footing and you kind of understand OK, pneumonia, Ive seen this before, I know how to handle this.

Then here comes coronavirus. And we dont really know what this is. So from a nursing standpoint its scary, because each day you come in and the protocol has changed. And youre trying to catch up and trying to treat your patients the best you can.

What are we going to do if all the health care workers get sick? Whos going to take care of anyone when health care workers go down because they didnt have the proper supplies and equipment? I did not think our country would be running out of supplies. You look at pictures of nurses in other countries, and theyre in full hazmat suits, and then to hear stories about, you know, a nurse wearing a trash bag to protect herself, I mean thats dystopian.

Now that its happened it seems like we should have been prepared for something like this.Anna Howard, 23, staff nurse

I hit my sixth month working as a nurse at the beginning of March. So, I am still very new to all this. Its interesting to know that right now Im experiencing something that hopefully I wont ever experience again in my work as a nurse. But Ive seen a debate in the nursing community where some people say This is what we signed up for, this is what is expected of us.

To some extent, yes.

But on the flip side I think that not having the right supplies, that is not what we signed up for.

Having a national or global shortage of supplies and equipment is something I didnt foresee happening. It seems like no one really did. But now that its happened it seems like we should have been prepared for something like this.

We were learning in nursing school about disaster preparedness, different emergency protocols and stuff. And I thought Oh, OK, we have to learn about this, whatever, this isnt going to be something that I really use. I didnt really take it that seriously. And now here I am a year later in the middle of it.

I dont feel like Im fully there for the patient, and I feel like thats taking a toll on my nursing.Gabrielle Barshay, 29, senior staff nurse

Im an oncology nurse, so building a rapport with my patient and making them feel good and distracting them from their disease is something Im used to. Now, I go into the room and Im rushed to get out. I dont feel like Im fully there for the patient, and I feel like thats taking a toll on my nursing.

On a regular day I always ask the patient, Where are you from, wheres your family from? I would always talk to the families. Now when the patient asks me to stay and I end up having to stay in the room longer, I almost get angry. How are they not understanding that theyre risking my life? I hate that feeling because its not who I am.

Part of nursing is compassion, and I feel like because of the virus a lot of us are starting to lose that a bit and its very scary.

It breaks my heart, because I just want to hang out with you for a little bit longer and hold your hand, but I really shouldnt.

I would never want to put my child at risk.Madina Rizaeva, 25, senior staff nurse

I feel really grateful for the people that I work with, for the place where I work. And feel very strongly about my team, theyre really capable of a lot of things. Strong, smart individuals, very resilient.

I think that if we make it through this were definitely always going to remain a part of each others lives. These are uncertain, very difficult times that were going through, and it matters whos with you during these moments.

Im not seeing my 2-year-old son, so that part has been really difficult. I would never want to put my child at risk. I FaceTime him everyday, but my mom sometimes thinks its not such a great idea, because then he walks around the house calling my name and looking for me. Sometimes I think that maybe its easier if I let him forget about me, but I dont know how long this whole situation is going to last, and I dont want him to forget me.

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Inside a NYC Hospital Coronavirus Unit During the Pandemic - The New York Times

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