Bearing witness to a Pandemic

Page 84

REÑACA — CHILE

Bearing witness to a pandemic BUPA | SANITAS

162

In April the chaos started, the last half of April and into May, but even worse in June. Around the end of May, a message came out from the Ministry of Health which asked the isapres to give cae funds to all patients who were Covid positive, because it was obviously going to be a high cost disease, spending twenty days in an icu could cost millions of pesos. So these patients would have financial protection. From that moment, we had to review all cases, even closed cases. My work was to call about administrative issues, which could be really cold. You would have to say to the family: We are going to bring your dad in in an ambulance, so I need you to give me an address to send you the documents to sign. Though that sounds cold, you can say it in a kind way that shows you understand the anguish and fear the family are feeling. I worked 24/7 on that. I would be called at ten at night for a transfer and I would be there until two or three in the morning coordinating everything until the patient arrived at the hospital. It was all very difficult. Sometimes the family didn’t want to accept that their father be sent to another town. I often gave out my private number to families, and they would call and say: the icu doctor hasn’t called me for two days now. Or I would call them and they would say: we call but nobody answers, and I would check and find that they had the number wrong and that’s why the family hadn’t heard anything.

What you often don’t realise is that there is a chain of administration events that have to happen so that this patient can get quality care and recover. That’s our invisible contribution. I am lucky that I practise and know about some alternative therapies. I practise yoga a lot and my teacher agreed to continue via video call. This has helped me a lot. They would call me at ten at We noticed at work that the clinical staff night for a transfer and I would were very anxious and exhausted. The head nurse came to me because she knows I am be there until two or three an “esoteric medium” as she calls it. So we brought yoga into the hospital and that has in the morning coordinating been great. Also, three weeks ago we started everything until the patient aromatherapy sessions in the icu and in the arrived at the clinic. emergency department. All with the support of the staff. I remember how I was shocked to learn that in Santiago, the icus started to be 99% full. The isapres would ask us to take patients into our icus, because some of the regions were going to collapse if we didn’t help out. I think we had the advantage of being almost a month behind the peak in Santiago, and also having hospitals the size of the Gustavo Fricke which were newly opened, so we could put in a lot of intensive care beds. We were able to contain Covid with the resources we had in the Region. When you looked at the statistics, we never went higher than 82 or 83% occupation of the ICU network, and although that is high, fortunately we never reached the number of 90 or 98% that happened in Santiago. Since I studied nursing, I have never worked much in hospitals, always in management. I think nurses are well prepared for working in management and administration. It is important that the administrative work we have undertaken during the pandemic is made visible as it has been very difficult and intense during the pandemic.�

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Articles inside

Bearing witness to a Pandemic

1min
page 107

florence nightingale More contemporary than ever

5min
pages 11-12

Thinking of future generations

1min
page 187

Welcoming new lives

3min
pages 182-186

We celebrated the recovery of each patient

2min
pages 188-192

The role of nurses in the pandemic

4min
pages 193-195

Cooperation at all times

1min
pages 162-163

Video consultations are here to stay

1min
pages 168-169

The nurses behind the management

4min
pages 164-167

Make the most of every moment

1min
pages 178-179

Valuing the simple things

1min
page 177

The next challenge

1min
pages 180-181

Non-Covid patients also need us

1min
pages 170-171

No statistics can show what people have been through

4min
pages 172-176

All life’s emotions condensed into a few months

1min
pages 156-157

At times, it all seemed like a maze

4min
pages 158-161

Professionalism and love, that’s our job

4min
pages 152-155

Always a nurse, with or without a pandemic

3min
pages 146-149

Each customer and individual

1min
pages 150-151

Learning

1min
page 145

We’ll get through this together

3min
pages 138-141

I am stronger than I think

2min
pages 142-144

Empathy prevention and care

2min
pages 134-136

Communication with the family made all the difference

1min
page 137

The loneliness pandemic

2min
pages 120-122

Love is what keeps us going

4min
pages 131-133

When the patients went home, we celebrated with music and clapping

4min
pages 123-125

Nothing prepares you for this

4min
pages 116-119

No time to think

2min
pages 126-127

Closer to our patients with cancer

1min
pages 114-115

A time of fast learning and great camaraderie

4min
pages 111-113

I volunteered to help my colleagues

2min
pages 98-99

Educating, guiding and accompanying our patients

1min
pages 108-110

I love what I do – I always wanted to be a nurse

4min
pages 105-107

Psychological support

1min
pages 100-101

I got Covid

2min
pages 102-104

I wouldn’t change what I went through

4min
pages 95-97

I never lost my strength

2min
pages 92-94

I remember how lonely the patients felt

4min
pages 88-91

When you are the patient you feel vulnerable

2min
pages 86-87

My small part in the fight against the pandemic

1min
pages 84-85

I was lucky to be a nurse

6min
pages 72-75

I enjoyed learning a new role during the pandemic

4min
pages 81-83

Mama, when is this going to end?

1min
pages 76-77

Facing the crisis as a team

1min
pages 78-80

People were anxious when they called

2min
pages 70-71

I take my hat off to my team

1min
pages 64-65

When you are caring for people you don’t feel any fear

4min
pages 66-69

A traumatic night shift

1min
page 63

We care for each patient, as if they were the only one

2min
pages 60-62

We just hoped for a miracle

4min
pages 56-59

Today we value our team and apreciate life more

3min
pages 50-54

Patients did not die alone

1min
page 55

We are not heroes, we are committed professionals

2min
pages 48-49

Being surrounded by death makes you value life more

4min
pages 28-31

I kept my promise

1min
pages 1, 6-11, 20-25, 27, 36-39

All he wanted was a hug

1min
pages 32-33

We transform our capability to help others

4min
pages 42-45

Things you never forget

1min
pages 40-41

Unprecedent tsunami

1min
pages 46-47

Your mother was never alone

5min
pages 36-39

The hardest winter in Madrid

1min
pages 34-35
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