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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOne Horrifying Way COVID-19 Could Affect You for Years, Warn Doctors
Thanks to mounting studies and research, doctors' understanding of how to treat severe cases of incoming coronavirus patients is getting better with each passing day. Unfortunately, it's also becoming clear that the disease is taking a greater toll on the body than we originally thought in the form of surprisingly horrific side effects and complications. Now, medical experts are raising concern over COVID-19 survivors developing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that could affect them for yearsand that the medical community should be prepared to deal with the care demands it will create.
Administrators from Britain's National Health Service have begun issuing calls for all physicians to automatically screen COVID-19 patients for PTSD before being discharged from the hospital. Effects of the disease, which can include intense nightmares and vivid flashbacks, can potentially last for life if they are not properly addressed and treated.
Experts point out that intensive care unit experiences, which are routinely considered to be deeply traumatic, are uniquely worse for survivors of coronavirus. "For many people hospitalized with COVID-19 it's been a potentially traumatic experience," Michael Bloomfield, MD, an NHS psychiatrist and researcher at University College London told the Guardian. "Being in intensive care is frightening. There was a particular risk to their own life, because they were very ill. The doctors and nurses treating people in hospital all had to wear protective equipment. People weren't able to see their relatives. And patients had tubes in them and, if they were intubated, they were in an altered state of consciousness."
The highly contagious nature and aggressively dangerous symptoms of the virus have made the experience of many patients are a particularly difficult one to process even after they've been discharged. "It was like being in hell," one patient told the BBC. "I saw people dying, people with the life being sucked from them. The staff all have masks on and all you saw was eyesit was so lonely and frightening."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/health-news/one-horrifying-way-covid-19-could-affect-you-for-years-warn-doctors/ar-BB167Lws?li=BBnb7Kz
Phoenix61
(17,006 posts)Short of being a war zone doc I dont think any civilian medical staff is used to seeing death on this scale.
LastDemocratInSC
(3,647 posts)She's on a 3 day per week schedule so her exposure time is less than others but it still keeps both of us on edge.