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People may be desperate to have fun, but I am desperate not to have a respirator shoved down my throat, nor have to wear diapers.
Amen to that!!!!
People may be desperate to have fun, but I am desperate not to have a respirator shoved down my throat, nor have to wear diapers.
I’m no expert. Never have been. But yet I feel with a certainty, that Omicron combined with the final 2 weeks of 2021, is going to result in a highly traumatic mid-late January, and beyond.
I feel like those of us aware of what Exactly is going on at this very moment, understand that to keep yourself safe, you should plan on taking Every precaution possible for the next 6-8 weeks, while the tsunami passes through.
It would be interesting to read, I agree. We were just given a briefing.<snipped for focus>
It would be interesting to read the report on the ethical reasoning regarding how the medical ethics committee came up with this determination.
WOW, that was faster that anticipated.Omicron is now dominant COVID-19 variant in US
Omicron has raced ahead of other variants and is now the dominant version of the coronavirus in the U.S., accounting for 73% of new infections last week, federal health officials said Monday.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention numbers showed nearly a six-fold increase in omicron’s share of infections in only one week.
It would be interesting to read, I agree. We were just given a briefing.
Here is the information we received:
Everyone in our county, indeed, in our entire state has had access to receive their vaccination. Transportation has been available to allow everyone to get to the vaccination centers, even if they don’t have a vehicle. They have even had access to mobile vaccination vans that have traveled around lower income areas.
If a patient is unvaccinated it is a choice that patient has made.
If it comes down to the need for a tiebreaker, if only one ICU bed or vent is available the tiebreaker will be vaccinated vs unvaccinated.
I hope you're all well and ready to face another surge of our nemises COVID.
I'll be honest and admit to this safe spot on the internet that I am emotionally drained by the ups and downs of the past two years.
I started hearing the alarms once again around Thanksgiving and knew it would be prudent to stock up on groceries/essentials yet again but, felt myself resisting - I think because it would be an aknowledgement that we are in fact facing yet another surge with so many unknowns. So today I broke down and bought tons and tons of supplies. Ugh. This may sound strange, but at the beginning of the pandemic I spent hours ordering every single thing I could think of that might be needed. It felt like a treasure hunt and the novelty of multiple boxes arriving every day was a bit of a rush. I'm sick and tired of anticipating every "what if" and ordering like my life might depend on it. The alure of it all has turned to dread.
I'm beyond exhausted of worrying about members of my family that are determined that COVID isn't going to stop them from living.
I dread the news covering the deaths of so many people that were loved by someone.
I feel so sad for healthcare employees that are being pushed to exhaustion and seeing things that break their hearts.
Etc, etc. etc.
Thanks for letting me vent, it's good to be able verbalize and time for me to dig deep to find hope and joy that I know is still there.
No, I am still here. I just worked for a couple of months at that hospital.Did you move out of Indiana? I'm kind of in shock here.
Medical ethics require care for all who need it, even as unvaccinated COVID patients flood hospitals
As Idaho’s hospitals and intensive-care units fill up with patients receiving costly life-saving care for an avoidable medical condition — severe COVID-19 in unvaccinated individuals — that care is taking priority over regular medical care for everything from hip replacements to cancer treatment.
Hospital leaders say that won’t change; none have any plans to distinguish between vaccinated and unvaccinated patients in determining who gets treated, even as health care resources are so strained that care could end up being rationed to those most urgently in need under crisis standards of care.
The reason is at the core of medical ethics: “We teach our health care workers to give the best care they can to whoever needs it,” said Dr. Steven Joffe, chief of the Division of Medical Ethics for the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and a pediatric oncologist and bioethicist.
“If both a criminal and a victim are injured in a crime, hospitals care for them both,” Joffe said. “Military doctors and nurses are trained to give care to the injured both from their own side and from the other. We don’t want to lose this ethic of nonjudgmental care.”
<snipped>
Joffe, at the University of Pennsylvania, said, “We do not want health care workers deciding who is ‘worthy’ of care and who is not. Even beyond COVID, a lot of health problems are related to choices people have made or actions they have taken or not taken.”
“I understand the sentiment,” he said, amid the crush of the COVID-19 pandemic in the unvaccinated population, “but acting on it takes us to a pretty dangerous place.”
BBM
Turning patients away because your ICU is full isn’t really a good option but unfortunately some of our area hospitals have been forced to divert both ambulances and walk in patients.
Two of our area hospitals are only allowing 50% of their ICU beds for COVID patients so they can still take care of other non-COVID patients. Heart attacks, accidents, other emergencies still occur so they are reserving 50% of their beds for non-COVID patients.
Our region is also on bypass but we are not turning away patients based on their vaccination status. All emergencies are taken to the nearest hospital with open beds as they work together regionally to meet emergency case demand.
I'm sending all of my prayers and best wishes your way!!!Tiff23fr - Thank You : ) Congrats to your Mom for completing her last chemo! Wishing all the best for her upcoming surgery too. : )
Thank you to everyone for your good thoughts and wishes.
I’ve been coming here since the beginning of this pandemic (sometimes just reading) for updates. You’re all a great bunch of people : )
Don’t know if I have finally gotten rid of this bug I’ve had but the port is scheduled for tomorrow am. I’m a bit nervous.
Failing to get vaccinated isn’t the only personal choice that can affect your healthcare options. For example, organ transplant programs don’t accept smokers, drug users, or patients who have problems with alcohol.
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