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Covid staff reveal ‘unpredictability’ of second wave as young patients fall ill


By PA News

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Staff at one of the country’s busiest hospitals have described the “unpredictability” of the second wave of coronavirus, which has seen previously healthy young patients die with Covid-19.

Coronavirus deaths since the summer have been characterised partly by increased numbers of young adults being admitted to hospital.

And staff at St George’s Hospital in Tooting, south London, said they are treating patients in their 20s and 30s, many seriously ill.

Salvatore Patinella, 30, senior staff nurse in the hospital’s acute dependency unit, told the PA news agency: “The situation is really serious.

“Initially we saw patients who were older – now patients who are really young are getting sick.

“It requires a lot of attention. You try the best to encourage them because they demoralise themselves, they get down, we just give the best we can, have a chat and encourage them.

“If they do the right thing, hopefully they will get better and get out of this hospital.”

There’s almost no pattern to it - we just can’t say
Omome Etomi, medical registrar

His colleague, medical registrar Omome Etomi, said it is impossible to predict the profile of patients brought in for care – and whether they will survive.

The 28-year-old said: “We are seeing patients across the spectrum, from their 20s right up to people in their 80s and 90s.

“It’s so unpredictable – I can’t tell you who’s going to be unwell and not, who’s going to improve and go home and who’s going to have a longer stay in ITU.

“I have admitted patients to the intensive care unit in their 20s and 30s, people who have no pre-existing conditions.

“There’s almost no pattern to it – we just can’t say.

“That’s why we all have to be so careful – your friend might have a mild illness but you don’t know how it’s going to be reintroduced in you.”

Nurses work on patients in the ICU at St George’s Hospital in Tooting, south-west London (Victoria Jones/PA)
Nurses work on patients in the ICU at St George’s Hospital in Tooting, south-west London (Victoria Jones/PA)
Staff in the corridor of the Acute Dependency Unit at St George’s Hospital (Victoria Jones/PA)
Staff in the corridor of the Acute Dependency Unit at St George’s Hospital (Victoria Jones/PA)

Intensive care consultant Dr Mohamed Ahmed, 40, said: “What’s apparent from the first and second wave is that you have patients in their 20s and 30s now.

“We have a gentleman here in his 30s who is incredibly sick – he had no underlying problems. That’s a bit of a shocker for us.”

Emergency department consultant Mark Haden said families of “otherwise fit and healthy young people” are “distraught” that their loved ones are being admitted to hospital with coronavirus symptoms.

And he warned everyone to heed the advice on keeping safe, and not be tempted to break the rules.

Dr Haden, 36, said: “Because a lot of these infections are asymptomatic, people may think that by breaking the rules and by mixing and by not washing their hands, not wearing a mask, that has no effects.

“But every time you break a rule, every time you pass on an infection, at the end of that chain of infection someone is going to get it severely, and someone is going to die from it.

“Although they may not see the consequences of breaking the rules, we see it every day in hospital and these things have very real consequences for patients.”

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