When Anne Elliott moved to the UK in 2019 the plan was to enjoy a carefree working holiday before returning to Australia for the serious stuff: marriage, mortgage, kids.
Elliott, a critical care nurse, took a job at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in the heart of the city. A few months later COVID-19 had begun to spread and when the first wave hit the UK, she found herself on the frontline.
“We were completely blind-sided by the scale of it,” says Elliott who worked with critically ill COVID patients in the hospital's intensive care unit. “We had no PPE. We had cardboard walls with duct tape to corner off sections of the emergency and ICU to COVID patients. It took us completely by surprise.”
At work, Elliott cared for uncountable numbers of COVID-19 patients with stretched resources: watching on as the hospital's medical consultants were forced to choose which patients would be given access to the top level of care and placed on a ventilator. She estimates roughly 40 per cent missed out.
Nine months later Elliott had zipped more than 50 patients into body bags. “That number of deaths was just me on my shifts, one nurse. It was really, really hard,” she says, her voice shaking at the memory.
Now back in Australia, working at a large capital city hospital that is making preparations for an increase in COVID patients, Elliott wants to share her experience of fighting the disease.
“I think it's important to tell my story because it's totally unimaginable [to people in Australia],” she says.
(Anne's personal journey, fighting and treating covid in the UK, in link. She describes Phase One, Phase Two, Phase Three, Phase Four, what happens)
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