Returning to work was horrific, and I felt like I was going into battle. I was fully gowned up, with two masks, a shield, and a head cover. I probably wore all this for six or seven hours before I could take it off for a five-minute break and eat something. By that point, my face hurt, my forehead hurt, my ears hurt...
trudi cloyd
But that didnt compare to the emotional shock. My first day back, I walked around and every single person in every room was on a vent or a non-rebreather, and it was so eerie. It was like I was in some alternate universe, out of some movie. It was like: Where am I? What happened?
trudi cloyd
The world had turned upside down in two weeks. None of us have seen our departments like this before, with back-to-back critical patients, where the next two hours determine whether they will live or die. You used to have patients at that level a couple times a shift, but it was multiple times an hour. Id take a moment of pause before I went in; if you dont mentally prepare, youre going to tear up.
Having the virus myself prepared me in a different way. It gave me perspective, and Im grateful I could understand what patients were going through. It was a very scary experience for me, and I understood why they were scared, too. Id tell patients who werent admitted that it will get better, that their symptoms are normal, but its just a very, very long road.
Additional reporting by Benedict Evans