I thought this was eye opening and very interesting. A local doctor from Ohio who also practices in California. It goes through the degree of efforts to decontaminate but also the difficult decision of whether to isolate from her husband and weighing the risks.
Former Springfield doctor in the coronavirus fight put to personal test
“I have been ridiculously aware of germs since the surgery rotation of my medical school,” Groves said. “In my entire career, I have never gotten an infection from a patient, nor have I infected my family ever.”
But even with the infection protections skills akin of an American Ninja Warrior, Groves had to check the research so she could defend “every square inch of her body.
“(It’s) not just for my own safety at work, but for the safety of the patients, the safety of my colleagues.”
“And it’s not just about gelling or hand-washing,” she said. “It’s also about when to mask and how to unmask,” which varies from mask to mask. It’s (also) about how to get the gown on, how to get the gown off and how to do that without contaminating the masks and the goggles.”
And it’s a process that doesn’t stop when she leaves the hospital.
“I pull in to my garage, which is separate from my house, and I close the garage door. I sanitize my keys, my badge and my phone and lay them on my windshield (dash). Then I take off my clothing and it goes straight in the washer, which is right in the garage.
The final steps in extending her safety streak are particularly dramatic.
“I open the garage door and … run butt-naked that 30 feet into the house.”
“While I am fairly confident of not bringing the virus home on my body,” Groves said, “we are both realistic about the likelihood that one of us will bring it home in our bodies, and unwittingly infect the other.”
Bottom line?
“We have decided that (the risk of being together) is better than the alternative: “being sick, or worse, dying, alone.”
She also wrote a book in 2014 with chilling similarities to COVID-19. I plan to read it.
Former Springfield doctor penned pandemic fiction years ago
In Virion’s chilling quarter-page epilogue, the virus, which has lived on earth far longer than human beings, whispers in the ears of the human beings of today and those who will inhabit the earth with it in generations to come.
You can’t even see me.
But I am here.
Still.
And so are you.
We (both) have survived.
And that is all the more I can say.
Former Springfield doctor in the coronavirus fight put to personal test
“I have been ridiculously aware of germs since the surgery rotation of my medical school,” Groves said. “In my entire career, I have never gotten an infection from a patient, nor have I infected my family ever.”
But even with the infection protections skills akin of an American Ninja Warrior, Groves had to check the research so she could defend “every square inch of her body.
“(It’s) not just for my own safety at work, but for the safety of the patients, the safety of my colleagues.”
“And it’s not just about gelling or hand-washing,” she said. “It’s also about when to mask and how to unmask,” which varies from mask to mask. It’s (also) about how to get the gown on, how to get the gown off and how to do that without contaminating the masks and the goggles.”
And it’s a process that doesn’t stop when she leaves the hospital.
“I pull in to my garage, which is separate from my house, and I close the garage door. I sanitize my keys, my badge and my phone and lay them on my windshield (dash). Then I take off my clothing and it goes straight in the washer, which is right in the garage.
The final steps in extending her safety streak are particularly dramatic.
“I open the garage door and … run butt-naked that 30 feet into the house.”
“While I am fairly confident of not bringing the virus home on my body,” Groves said, “we are both realistic about the likelihood that one of us will bring it home in our bodies, and unwittingly infect the other.”
Bottom line?
“We have decided that (the risk of being together) is better than the alternative: “being sick, or worse, dying, alone.”
She also wrote a book in 2014 with chilling similarities to COVID-19. I plan to read it.
Former Springfield doctor penned pandemic fiction years ago
In Virion’s chilling quarter-page epilogue, the virus, which has lived on earth far longer than human beings, whispers in the ears of the human beings of today and those who will inhabit the earth with it in generations to come.
You can’t even see me.
But I am here.
Still.
And so are you.
We (both) have survived.
And that is all the more I can say.