Friday, August 28, 2020

Corona Virus Update 8/28

 It’s been a long hall my Healthcare  friends. I don’t need to tell you that. If my math is correct, today marks 171 days since the first confirmed case of Covid in Connecticut. 

52,495 Connecticut residents have tested positive. 4,465 have died. 
At one point we had almost 2,000 hospitalized. 
Today’s numbers:
% positive tests was 1% today, there were no deaths, hospitalized up 4 to 60 statewide. We had 5 deaths in the last 7 days.
We seem to have leveled off for several weeks. 
% positive tests are hovering around 1% or slightly lower. Deaths are 5-10 a week. Hospitalizations between 45-65. 
I expect numbers to hover until a vaccine  or a second wave come. 
That being said, with every new thing that opens, including schools, a potential surge awaits. 
If we see any jumps from this “baseline” that would be our first sign that a second wave has started. 
We are learning how to better treat it and prevent it, so that is a big positive. 
If asked what is the most important, I’d say masks.

Our educator members are worried. They don’t have the medical background our healthcare workers do so they have a fear of the unknown. 
It’s understandable. 
I know our healthcare workers have already carried the heaviest burden. I have to now ask you to be there for our non-healthcare members. Acknowledge their concerns and assure them that if they become ill, you will be there to care for them. 
That assurance will help. 
To our educators, and state employees who may also be returning to work, please wear your masks, wash your hands, and socially distance. 
We’ll get through this together. 
Be well, 
John

Saturday, August 22, 2020

A letter to educators from a nurse

 A letter to educators from a nurse. 

My sisters and brothers,

Today, on the eve of schools reopening, I’d like to address the teachers, paraprofessionals and school support staff that have become as near and dear to my heart as the nurses I used to work side by side with. 

It is an honor to serve as Executive Vice President of AFT Connecticut. In that role I get to represent an incredible group of Public Employees, Nurses & Health Professionals and educators. 

Our educators are incredibly dedicated professionals, each and every one of you.

You care as much about your students as I cared about my patients. 

I tell people I became a trauma nurse instead of a teacher or PSRP because I didn’t have the courage to stand at the front of a classroom. While there are many differences in our roles, there are also at least as many similarities. 

You do not do this for the glory or for the money, you do this because something inside you says you must. You MUST do what you can to leave this world better than you found it. 

I get that. 

I TOTALLY get that. 

THAT is what binds is together. Nurses and healthcare professionals, teachers and PSRPs, and public servants. 

It’s what makes us a union of caregivers. 

So, as you prepare to go back to school, I know you have concerns and worries. For your own health, your family and your students. 

This is understandable. 

Please know that Your Local, state and national officers understand and care. Please know we fight for you and your students every day. Please know we will not abandon you. 

I am available 24/7 for any questions. Jan Hochadel is in constant contact with the leadership of your local and those in state and municipal leadership. Divisional VPs Mary Yordon and Shellye Davis are incredible advocates on your behalf, and Randi Weingarten has your back. 

Please also remember that our school nurses stand ready to help. 

Your dedication to education is deeply appreciated. 

We cannot predict what the school year will look like, but together, with your leadership, we will do the best we can in this situation. 

Be well and be safe. 

Sunday, August 16, 2020

Corona Virus Update 8/16

 I haven't done a Corona Virus update in some time but reading an article on T cell immunity and the many questions I have received from members on safety and school reopening, perhaps it is time.

First, I am not an epidemiologist or a virologist. I am a registered nurse and I have followed this virus closely and tried to learn as much as I can. I can't speak with certainties, but I can give my opinions. A  part of that reason is that I am not an expert and a part is that even the experts are still learning, as this is a relatively new virus, and studies take time.

We were hit early in Connecticut.  Our first confirmed case was on March 8th. The first confirmed Connecticut death was on March 20th. On 4/22 we had 1,972 Connecticut residents hospitalized. On May 20th we started a slow reopening of our businesses.At that time, we had 887 hospitalized and 3,529 residents had died. 

As of last Friday, 8/14, almost 5 months since our first confirmed case, 56 were hospitalize, 4,453 have died, 935,680 have been tested, 50,897 have been positive. Our hospitalizations have hovered between 72-53 for a month and our positive test rate have remained near or below 1% for several weeks. Meanwhile, the rest of the country is not fairing as well.

Scientific studies take time. This virus appeared around the beginning of the year, so much of what we 'know" is yet to be proven. However, we know that this is a Corona Virus, as is SARS, MERS, and the common cold. We are reasonably confident that it spreads primarily, but not exclusively by the respiratory tract. We know it can live outside the body for at least a few hours and maybe under the right conditions, several days. We know that it can be spread by coughing, sneezing, breathing, talking and singing. We are reasonably certain it can be spread 3-6 feet by droplets that we expel when we cough, sneeze, breath, talk and sing. It appears, from some research, that it may be able to be airborne (meaning it could remain in the air longer than a droplet and travel further), although there is disagreement as to the degree this can be so. We believe a person can be without symptoms (asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic) and still spread the virus. There is some evidence that we may build some immunity if we have the virus or perhaps a similar Corona virus, although the degree of protection and how long it would last, is unknown.

Understanding that there is still more we are uncertain of than certain, how should we proceed?

Cautiously, I believe. I believe that is why we have decreased cases in Connecticut. We quickly asked people to stay at home and we have slowly reversed that as the number of cases has decreased. We must also be willing to readjust and tighten our measures if cases increase.

For now, assuming this virus is spread primarily by respiratory means, I believe universal mask wearing, hand washing, cleaning surfaces, avoiding large gatherings, and gathering outdoors when possible, remain prudent measures. Masks decrease the risk that I may unknowingly have the virus and spread it to you. Hand washing in case I touch a contaminated surface. Avoiding large gatherings and being outdoors because increased numbers of people increase the risk of virus being present in the air and being indoor concentrates that virus more than being outdoors.

Those caring for infected individuals or suspected individuals should use full airborne precautions, including gowns, gloves, face shields, and N95 or better respirators, and this PPE should be single use, unless designed to be decontaminated between uses. This PPE should not be used when treating multiple patients or even the same patient on multiple visits.

These are my best recommendations based on what I have read and observed. although some of them are inconvenient, none of them carry any risk, and most experts agree that they will help.

Someday we will have full studies and more certainties, and even a vaccination. Until then we should air on the side of caution. 4,453 have died in Connecticut, 169,000 in the US, 772,000 worldwide.

Be safe.

Sunday, August 2, 2020

45 years of love and friendship

45 years ago today Michelle and I officially became partners in life. Obviously, I got the better part of the deal.
It’s hard to put into words what she means to me. We are a part of each other, yet we each remain our own persons too.
I love her very much.

Saturday, August 1, 2020

Don’t call us Heroes and treat us as Zeros

For those who are not aware, this is my home Local and the hospital I served in for 21 years. I am a proud charter member of the Local, served on the organizing and negotiations committees and as president. I remain as a member of the Executive Board.
Management often calls our AFT Connecticut AFT Nurses & Health Professionals members heroes but treats them like zeros.
They are there every day for us at Backus, Windham, Natchaug, L&M, Johnson, Windham,Manchester, Rockville, John Dempsey, Danbury and New Milford hospitals, as well as many visiting nurses agencies, clinics and schools.
They have risked their lives for us in this pandemic.
This is the international Year of the Nurse and Midwife.
Let’s treat them like true heroes.
Please come out and support them.