stitcherbob
Nitro Member
"Reasons for the access always the same: fever and breathing difficulties, fever and cough, respiratory failure. Radiology reports always the same: bilateral interstitial pneumonia, bilateral interstitial pneumonia, bilateral interstitial pneumonia. All to be hospitalized.
Someone already to be intubated and go to intensive care. For others it's too late... Every ventilator becomes like gold: those in operating theatres that have now suspended their non-urgent activity become intensive care places that did not exist before. "
www.upworthy.com
Exactly what I had this time last year....5 days in a coma, intubated, on a ventilator, trying to clear my lungs of bilateral interstitial pneumonia
Someone already to be intubated and go to intensive care. For others it's too late... Every ventilator becomes like gold: those in operating theatres that have now suspended their non-urgent activity become intensive care places that did not exist before. "
A doctor in the heart of Italy's outbreak shares what life is like in the hospital now
Those of us living in countries like the U.S., where coronavirus has arrived but not quite exploded exponentially, seem a bit conflicted about what our individual responses should be. Ideally, we’d simply heed the advice of medical experts at the CDC and WHO instead of politicians who have a...
Exactly what I had this time last year....5 days in a coma, intubated, on a ventilator, trying to clear my lungs of bilateral interstitial pneumonia