Short Wave - Pandemic Dispatches From The ER
Episode Date: September 1, 2021We're marking Maddie's last week on Short Wave! Today, Maddie wanted to highlight a COVID-related episode from earlier this year. The pandemic has been a big part of our coverage and this particular e...pisode stands out. We hear reflections from two emergency room health workers on the pandemic, how their lives have changed and their hopes as more and more people get vaccinated. Tomorrow, a new episode!Are you a healthcare worker who would be willing to share your experience with the Short Wave team? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, everybody. Maddie Safai here with Shortwave producer Britt Hansen. We are on day three of celebrating my last week on Shortwave by sharing some of my favorite episodes.
Yeah, how are you feeling, bud? How's the week going?
You know, I'm good, I'm good. We're all experiencing a lot of emotions.
I know, no kidding. I'm up. I'm down. Honestly, I'm kind of all over the place.
Yeah, I hear you. And so far this week, we've been sharing fun episodes, like silly little moments.
together. And that's because
that's a big part of making
this show. But
you know, we've also spent a lot
of time reporting on this pandemic
and the tremendous human
cost. And one episode you
produced in particular, Brit, does a
really powerful job of telling
some of these stories. And, you know,
with the current state of the pandemic,
experiencing another surge,
many hospitals under
extreme stress, this episode
is just as relevant now as it was
back then. Yeah, I wish it wasn't true, but it totally is. We made this episode back in March when
not many people had been vaccinated. Healthcare workers around the country were really struggling.
And we were fortunate enough that two emergency room workers came on the show to generously share
their experiences with us. Yeah. I mean, we owe so much to our sources. So I want to take a
second personally, before I leave, to say thank you to all of you that
have shared your lives, your experiences, and your struggles with us through this pandemic.
It is not easy, and we appreciate you.
Yeah, we really do. And with that, here's the show.
You're listening to Shortwave from NPR.
The coronavirus has disrupted all of our lives, and that's especially true for health care workers.
nurses and techs and doctors and hospitals, clinics, nursing homes,
they were some of the first to see how bad it could really get,
like Jamila Goldsmith, an emergency room physician in Georgia.
I remember reading the stories about what was taking place in Italy,
and I was scared to death, to be perfectly honest.
It'll be a year ago next week that the World Health Organization
declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic.
days later, a national emergency was declared here in the U.S.
For Mariah Clark, an EMT, an emergency nurse in Wisconsin,
it was a year where everything was upended.
And it felt like you were on a slippery, muddy hill,
and you could see how steep and how far that hill was
and how many rocks, and you could see the precipice at the bottom,
and you couldn't stop sliding.
So today in the show, two emergency room health care workers reflect on what this last year has been like for them,
and just how much has changed in their work and lives.
I'm Maddie Safaya, and you're listening to Shortwave from NPR.
Today we're handing over the show to two emergency room health care workers,
Jamila Goldsmith, an emergency room physician in Georgia, who found out she was pregnant last fall.
And Mariah Clark, who works at a hospital in Wisconsin, she says,
even before the pandemic, every shift was busy.
Since COVID hit, it's been interesting to see it change.
We started out with it actually getting really slow.
My hospital was canceling elective surgeries.
We were discharging anyone who was stable to go home
so that we could be ready for the expected surge.
You know, we stopped having patients in hallways.
We stopped having hordes of patients in the waiting room
some days. You know, it was so much quieter and so much more solemn. And then it kind of eased back up a bit.
And then October, November, and into December, that was a really bad time. We didn't know when
the vaccines were coming. We didn't know when more PPE was coming. And it just felt eternal and
heavy. You know, I found out that I was pregnant in September before all the big waves when
like Christmas, New Year, Thanksgiving, when all the holidays hit. And so that was a bit of
an anxious time for me just because I had to consider not only myself, but the fact that I'm
carrying a baby. So I have pretty much just figured out,
what to do to keep myself safe.
And that includes, like, I purchased a respirator.
I, of course, have a strict routine when I come in the house,
still stripping everything down, washing my clothes immediately,
and, you know, just doing everything to make my family feel comfortable
with me going in that environment and coming home.
It was a patient.
It was a four-month-old baby.
presumed to have COVID that I had to put on a ventilator and being pregnant myself having that
experience and this is before I got vaccinated. That was one of the things that stuck out in my mind.
And so I will say that, yeah, I have to try and figure out how to not carry that into my personal
life. Sometimes cases like that stick with you. You never get that desensitized. But, you know,
for the sake of everyone else, you hold on, you just keep it inside and you share and decompress
with other physicians who understand what the challenges are and can empathize with, you know,
the cases that you see. I remember one elderly black woman who had medical conditions that meant
she was immunocompromised, but she was also the primary breadwinner for her family. And so she had been
going to work and she worked at a big box retail store and she was not going anywhere else she was having
her groceries delivered she was only staying at home you know and she'd had organ transplants and
chemotherapy and like she had been through a lot medically over the years and i got to tell her her test results
and she just collapsed in the bed just like crumpled over
sobbing. I've been so careful. I haven't gone anywhere. I haven't done anything. She was terrified that she was
going to die. She knew she was vulnerable and she was extra vulnerable because the pandemic has
disproportionately affected black people and people of color. And I'm sitting here in a face shield
and an N95 mask and a surgical mask and a cap and a gown and double glove. And I'm sitting here in a face shield and an N95 mask and a
double gloves. I mean, she can see two inches of my face right across my eyes. And she's just sobbing
into me because she swears she's never going to leave this hospital. And both of us know that
she might not. Being a, you know, African-American physician, recognizing just how much
black and brown communities suffer from disease and, you know, lack of access to care, I think those are
highlighted. And of course, I've always recognized these things, but I don't think that everyone
recognized them. So I think that may have been a good thing in terms of bringing more recognition
and shedding a light on that, because it's important as we move into vaccinating black and brown
communities that we put more emphasis and effort in making sure that we do right by these communities
move it forward. It's been interesting to see how my coworkers' attitudes have changed. In March,
I think a whole bunch of us sat around and anybody who didn't already have a medical power of
attorney or an advanced directive filled them out. And a lot of my coworkers are, you know,
young people in their 20s who've never really thought about that before. Whereas now, we're all
pretty used to it. Almost all of my coworkers got vaccinated when the vaccines started coming out in
December, and that took a palpable weight out of the room. You know, a lot of us felt just a lot
better after getting that. You know, we knew that there was still a risk, but it's like you've got a
life preserver. You know, you may still be out there in the ocean waiting for, you know, rescue, but like,
you got something to hang on to now.
Initially, when the vaccine became available,
you know, of course I thought it was an awesome thing
that we'd have another layer of protection.
So when I started seeing that there were pregnant women getting vaccinated,
and I talked with my OB doctor who, you know,
of course, the advice is it's a personal decision,
but in front-line workers who have high-risk jobs, which is me,
that is recommended that I get it because the risk of getting COVID and pregnancy are much higher
than the possibilities of risk, the low possibilities of risk with obtaining the vaccine.
And so I still wanted to put some thought into it.
Of course, trying to read every piece of data that's out there, which is not that
much. So I was nervous, but every COVID patient that I went in the room, it was in the back of my mind,
like, oh my God, what if this is the patient that affects me? You know, I go in a room and I feel
my baby kicking me and I'm like, oh my gosh, like, what if I put us in danger because I don't get
this? And so I decided to go ahead and get the vaccine. I would say, as a,
healthcare worker who has seen people losing their family members, people dying alone,
that we have to be conscious of other people around us, older people around us, people
who are vulnerable.
We really have to show that we actually care for one another.
And I think that is actually the most patriotic thing we can do right now is simply wear
a mask, get vaccinated if you have access and you're eligible to do that now, because we'll never
get to that point if we don't start really consciously making sacrifices and thinking of others
and not just ourselves. It feels more like eventually this will become a bad disease, but a
disease that we are accustomed to and can handle long term. You know, people are no longer terrified
to go into a COVID patient's room. We just put on our isolation gear like we do for people who
have any other disease we need to isolate for and do our thing and clean up and come back out.
And the feeling of the imminent overhanging shadow of death at the beginning to, instead of being in
darkness being in twilight.
And maybe, maybe the dawn is coming.
I'm not actually an optimist, but it does feel cautiously hopeful.
A huge, huge thank you to ER nurse Mariah Clark and ER physician Jamila Goldsmith
for sharing their stories with us.
If you are a healthcare worker or you know one who would be willing to share their experience
with the shortwave team, email us at Shortwave at N.
This episode was produced and reported by Britt Hansen, fact-checked by Rasha Airedi, and edited by Viala.
The audio engineer for this episode was Josh Newell.
I'm Maddie Safaya.
Thanks for listening to Shortwave, NPR's Daily Science podcast.
See you tomorrow.
