Inside a Windsor ICU, exhausted staff fight 2nd COVID wave knowing worse still ahead - Action News
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WindsorIn Depth

Inside a Windsor ICU, exhausted staff fight 2nd COVID wave knowing worse still ahead

Windsor Regional Hospital is being told to brace for more COVID-19 hospitalizations while treating an already huge wave of critical-care patients.

'We're very busy, we're very tight and we're very worried about what's to come'

Registered nurse Tasia Seguin works at Windsor Regional Hospital on a floor that has been declared a COVID-19 outbreak. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Each new patient has adifferent name, a different face. But to Kaytie Slawik, a respiratory therapist in the ICUat Windsor Regional Hospital,theyall feel familiar.

"They're hard to handle. They're hard to treat, they're hard to cure. There are no answers," she said.

Slawik isworkingat the heartof the far-deadlier second wave in this OntarioCOVID-19hotspot, operating ventilators for the sickest patients in Windsor-Essex.

Sheis there when patients with worsening conditionsare intubated. Before they're hooked up to the ventilator, andunable to speak, theytell her the same thing: "I don't want to die."

Shereassures them she'll do everything she can to prevent that.

Standing inside a near-capacity ICU wearing an N95 respirator and goggles, Slawik describedit as something of a sterile spaceship. The unit has been transformed to adjust for the pandemic. White canvas tarps block off an entire wall of rooms to create additionalnegative pressure rooms.

A deadlier second wave is overwhelming the ICU at Windsor Regional Hospital while the virus spreads rapidly in the community. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Silver tubingstretches out intothe halls of the unit, snaking along the ceilingwhile staff dressedin aqua-coloured scrubs rotate through rooms, checking in on a dozen patientsstruggling to breathe.

Despite theseefforts, 40 per centof COVID-19 patientswho needa ventilator in Windsor-Essex die, according to the medical directorof the ICU.

CBC Windsor was invited inside Windsor Regional Hospital on Monday, to see up closeas hospital staff powerthrough another day in what is a brutal start to a new year battling the pandemic.

Nurses and doctors walk the halls with a quiet urgency, patients cling to life with the support ofmachines operated by overwhelmed staff. Some health-care workerstalk about theiranxious mornings getting ready for work, worried they might be infected by the deadly virus and bring it home to family. Doctors talk about the unique challenges of providing urgent updates to family through video calls.

The hospitalizations are higher in this second wave and a recent provincial report said that health-care worker burnout is also on the rise.

A placelike Windsor Regional Hospitalis where the true impact of COVID-19 can be witnessed and fully understood.

WATCH |Respiratory therapist describes some of the changes between 1st and 2nd waves ofCOVID-19 in Windsor-Essex:

Hospital staff notice more sick patients in second wave

4 years ago
Duration 0:46
Respiratory therapist Kaytie Slawik describes some of the notable changes between the first and second wave of the pandemic in Windsor-Essex.

Preparing for worse

Karen Riddell,vice-president of critical care at the hospital,compares this stageof the pandemic to a continuing series of car crashes.

"You have a large car accident, you deal with that car accident and you are able to get people into the system.You don't have another car accident, you know, an hour later, and an hour later and an hour later.With COVID, that's what we're seeing."

Nearly a year into the pandemic, more people are getting sick andmore people are dying.

More than 11,000 people have tested positive for the virus and271 people have died in Windsor-Essex sincethe health unit reported the first positive case on March 20, 2020.

A COVID-19 patient is seen in the ICU at Windsor Regional Hospital during the second wave of the pandemic. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

By Ontario's standards, Windsor-Essex has a highCOVID-19 case rate when adjusted for population, second only to Peel region. It has the highestrate of people dying of COVID-19outside of Toronto, according to provincial figures.

It's worse than ever, and projections show that Riddell and her teamneed to prepare for more people with COVID-19 requiring critical care.

"We have to try and build that capacity for what has been predicted with the modelling. And although right now we're sitting about provinciallyover 400 cases in the ICU, they're predicting a thousand," she said.

Respiratory therapist Kaytie Slawik said she feels overworked and knows each day she'll have a full list of patients that need critical care in the ICU. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Michelena Sockett,a registered nurse in the ICU unit, remembersthe first people with COVID-19 arrivingin the critical care unit at the hospital last year.

"Those were the sickest people I had ever seen,"said Sockett, who was three months into a new role as a registered nurse on the intensive care unit at the Metcampus.

"I thought, wow, I couldn't imagine myself taking care of somebody that sick, because I had only just started. But now, these COVID patients, a lot of them are that sick."

Sockett has direct contact with COVID-19 patients in the ICU. Wearing scrubs, a shower cap, booties, a gown, goggles, glasses, a face shield and an N95 mask, Sockettreaches down to the floor and zips open a flap and enters aroom, careful to close the flap behind her.

Nurse Michelena Sockett is careful to properly fit her personal protective equipment as she cares for a COVID-19 patient in the ICU. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

The changes to the ICU make her job harder.

"Everything is really closed off, and it's hard to sometimes see in the rooms, depending on where the windows are, and it's hard to hear alarms and pumps and patients, especially down at the end, because of the[HVACsystem]," said Sockett,standing in one of three empty rooms at the ICU after having just checked in on a patient.

WATCH |Nurse Michelena Sockett explains some of the lasting effects for COVID-19 patients in the ICU:

Windsor ICU nurse describes lengthy recovery process for COVID patients

4 years ago
Duration 1:24
Nurse Michelena Sockett explains some of the lasting effects for COVID-19 patients in the ICU.

On this day, 12 of the 15 people in the ICU at the Metcampus areCOVID-19 patients on a ventilator. The open beds are managed for an urgent careemergency.

No visitors have been allowed in the hospital since December, one of the many changes brought in beforeWindsor-Essex entered a lockdown, which preceded a provincial shutdown on Dec.26 and now a province-widestate of emergencyand stay-at-home order.

As the city's statushas changed, so has the ICU. Without family visits, there are no flowers. No balloons, no stuffed animals. Parts of the hospital feel hollow without the personal touches added to patients' rooms to make them feel comfortable.

Thoseabsencesalso wearon the staff.

"I miss a lot of it, but I feel like it's so necessary for people to help us out because [the situation is]hard," Sockett said.

Since the pandemic started, 120 people have died at Windsor Regional Hospital 29in the last two weeks.

'It doesn'treally feel like it ends'

For Sockett, removing all her personal protective equipmentat the end of the day doesn't feel like a relief. It's just another step in a long, cruel day.

"I have to really scrub down," she said after leaving apatient's room.(That patient diedthe next day.)

Going home doesn't feel like the end for Sockett.

"We're doing more shifts here. We're taking care of more people. It doesn't really feel like it ends," she said."You get a little bit of a break when you get home and then you come right back in and do the same thing over again."

Nurse Michelena Sockett joined the ICU at Windsor Regional Hospital a few months before the pandemic hit Windsor-Essex. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

On the fourth floor of the Metcampus, an internal medicine areais now a COVID-19 unit. It was changed over during the first wave of the pandemic.

Sleep rooms normally used to diagnosechronic health problemsare now surge beds used when the hospital hits capacity, which it has operated above at various times during the pandemic. Staff recently moved more than 100 patients to hospitals in Chatham-Kent, Sarnia and London to create space for critical patients.

Nurse Jen Hurst said the visitors restrictions have made it more stressful for staff, families and patients. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Jenn Hurst has seven years' experience as a nurse andfinds the current pandemic pressure unreal. "It's very stressful," she saidthrough an N95 mask and protective goggles.

On top of that, her unit is currently in an outbreak. Eleven staff members have tested positive for COVID-19 as they treat sick patients.

Filling in for absent family

The hardest part of her day is treating patients while filling the void left by visitor restrictions.

"Me having to play that family member role to a patient that I've just met is really stressful," she said.

Hurst knows it's a vital part of her expanding role during this pandemic, and onethat families appreciate. She finds comfort in that.

Still, "it's like I'm a stranger walking into their life, being a family member to them, which is scary for them, intimidating for us,"Hurstsaid.

The floor seems calm compared to the ICU, but only because of thedemeanour of the staff, takinga brief moment to talk during a relatively quiet periodon the floor.

These iPads are the only way for families to see their loved ones inside Windsor Regional Hospital's ICU unit. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

"Right now, patients are stable on our floor. We're working very, very hard to maintain that level of calmness on our unit," said Hurst, emphasizing calmness with air quotes.

Staff check in on each other throughout the day to help manage the stress. But Hurst admits they all carry it home with them.

"Life outside of work is complicated as well. We're real people, we have families and we take the stress home with us to a certain degree," she said.

"When we have hard days, I can't just forget about it at home.But I do find comfort knowing I've done everything I can in my day."

'I've been put in this role for a purpose'

TasiaSeguinhas been a registered nurse at Windsor Regional Hospital for 14 years and calls thisthe worst yearof her career. She feels anxious heading into work each day.

"It's just the unknown. What's going to happen today? Am I going to have to call family members and tell them bad news?" said Seguin.

Her name is written in pink on her face shieldfor patients to read.

Seguin finds focusing on the positive parts of the work keeps her motivated even as the daily case numbers rise and hospitalizations increase.

"I'm gratefulwe're here for this community. How lucky are we to be those people to support them? I feel like I've been put in this role for a purpose."

WATCH: 'We're trying to avoid getting to chaos,' sayshospital's vice-president of critical care:

'We're trying to avoid getting to chaos' at Windsor Regional Hospital

4 years ago
Duration 1:16
Chief nursing executive and vice president of critical care Karen Riddell said COVID-19 patients are staying longer in ICU beds at Windsor Regional Hospital.

Even so, Seguin and Hurst know it's hard for those who don't see what they do to fully understand how the virus can ripat families.

"When I am holding an iPad to a patient who is, you know,in comfort care ... and we are doing everything we can to let all their family members see them,say their goodbye....That is not fake, that is real, and that is traumatic for everybody involved."

Always ready

Back in the ICU,ateamrushes to puton additional layers of PPE.They're preparing to go into a COVID room where a patient is "crashing."

Five people are workingon it,peering inside the room through a clear sheet of plastic in the canvas, writingdown notesasthey try to diagnose the problem.

"We try to get the minimum number of people in the room to minimize potential exposure," said Riddell, the v-p of critical care,as the team works at a dizzying pace.

"Proning" patients that is, flipping them onto their stomachs or back while hooked up to a ventilator could take six people at once, depending on the patient.

"Early on in wave one, there was a push to put patients on ventilators early, which we stopped doing after the first little while in wave one. We really now wait," said Dr. Natalie Malus, medical director of the ICU.

Malus said COVID-19 patients can quickly become seriously ill in a matter of hours. She's seen people go from needing limited oxygen to being on a ventilator within 24 hours.

A team cares for a COVID-19 patient at Windsor Regional Hospital. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Malus said they learned lessons from the first wave, but the problem withthe secondis how admissions have increased and continue to rise.

"We have surpassed our total number of critical care admissions from wave one and the curve is up-sloping and we're still on the very steep part of that up-slope," said Malus.

"We haven't reached the plateau yet.The deaths are going to follow with that."

Respiratory therapist Slawik enters the ICU each day with a full list of patients she will spend every moment of her shift trying to help breathe with a ventilator.

"We're overworked. We have like an average of seven or eight patients a person. Usually we only have about three or four. So we're at double capacity with no extra help," she said.

"We're bouncing from patient to patient and we manage to get things done. But patients aren't getting the best care that they possibly could."

Surrounded by the signs of a pandemic,such as spoiled PPE in waste buckets, Slawikpoints out the evidencethat this is how things will be for a while namely, there areno non-COVIDpatients.

"We all want COVID to be over. But it can't go back to normal until we have the ability to treat normal patients in the hospital. Right now, we are only able to treat COVIDs. Regular people that are sick aren't able to get beds."

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