Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'We Had No Idea What Was Going To Hit Us': Community Physicians From Queens Face Unique Challenges In Virus War
Victor Peralta is a pediatrician, but in reality he cares for entire families. Working-class, Spanish-speaking immigrants pour into his small office beneath New York City鈥檚 No. 7 subway line鈥攑arents, grandparents, young brothers and sisters.In recent weeks, Dr. Peralta says, the new coronavirus that has torn through his patients鈥 multigenerational households has also infected his staff鈥攖hree employees recovered at home, but a medical assistant ended up in critical condition at nearby Elmhurst Hospital. They had kept the Jackson Heights, Queens, office open even after much of the city shut down in mid-March. (O'Brien and West, 4/17)
Before the coronavirus, respiratory therapists mostly worked in the shadows. But now what they do 鈥 help people breathe 鈥 has thrust them into the spotlight. 鈥淏reathing is the most important life function,鈥 said David Van De Carr, a respiratory therapist at Mount Sinai Morningside, in Manhattan. 鈥淭his disease is very much focused on that.鈥 (Howard, 4/17)
After long shifts treating covid-19 patients in New York hospitals, emergency room doctor Calvin D. Sun goes home and works for another 45 minutes. He cleans. He peels off his shoes, scrubs his jacket and places his protective suit outdoors to bake in the sun. Finally, he takes a shower, hot and scouring, to eliminate any microbes that could cling to his body like invisible thorns. This new homework is as stressful as it is tedious. (Guarino, 4/16)
Kaiser Health News: California Shies Away From Calls To Eliminate Restrictions On Nurse Practitioners
As the demand for health care workers surges with the coronavirus case count, many states are rushing to lift restrictions on nurse practitioners, who provide much of the same care as doctors do. But California allows nurse practitioners to work only under the supervision of a doctor, and most limitations on their practice are likely to hold. (Bluth, 4/17)
Kaiser Health News: NYC Nurse Says He鈥檚 Not Scared: 鈥業 Am Only Doing My Job鈥 For COVID-19 Patients
Before the deadly coronavirus hit New York, Francisco D铆az鈥檚 job as a gerontological nurse practitioner was educating seniors on managing their diabetes. Now, he鈥檚 at the heart of the pandemic, working in a New York City emergency room. (Andalo, 4/17)
COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, is transmitted by coughing, sneezing or simply speaking, releasing infected droplets into the air. And since seriously ill COVID-19 patients often require ventilators, Masud, director of the Critical Care Center at Houston Methodist, wanted to protect his colleagues during this intubation procedure. So he helped create a clear plexiglass box that covers the patient鈥檚 head and shoulders. (Leinfelder, 4/16)
When Jones' test came back positive as well, he joined a growing club: health care workers in the metro Detroit area who have contracted COVID-19. Nobody knows how many, exactly, because some health systems aren't sharing or collecting that data. But more than 2,600 health care workers in the area either have been out sick with symptoms similar to those of COVID-19 or have tested positive for the coronavirus. (Wells, 4/17)