Also: How to stay healthy when your partner, spouse or roommate has COVID-19
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April 18, 2020
Good morning,
These are not normal times, especially at hospitals like Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Dr. Daniel Talmor, who oversees anesthesia and critical care at the hospital, told WBUR that intubations are more than triple the normal number.
"On any given day, we would intubate approximately 10 patients that had COVID-19," Talmor said, including more than 80 COVID-19 patients in intensive care, most on ventilators.
The hard-to-swallow reality is that many patients don't get well enough to come off ventilators. Staffers celebrate every time someone does.
Read the story below to learn more about how doctors are using intubations and what has changed about the process during the coronavirus crisis.
— Meagan McGinnes, Newsletter editor
newsletters@wbur.org
The Rundown
url[How Intubation Went From A Common Hospital Procedure To A Critical Function In Addressing COVID-19](
WBUR’s Carey Goldberg spoke with a leading Boston intensive care physician about how doctors are using this potentially lifesaving treatment. [Read more.](
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[CRISPR And Spit Might Be Keys To Faster, Cheaper, Easier Tests For The Coronavirus](
Being able to test for coronavirus infections is a critical component to reopening society — even a little bit — after the initial wave of COVID-19. So there is an urgent need for faster, cheaper tests than the ones available at present. [Read more.]( Â
[How To Stay Healthy When Your Child, Spouse Or Roommate Has COVID-19](
How do you minimize your risk when moving out isn't an option? Here's what infectious disease and public health experts have to say.[Read more.](
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Support the news
[She’s A Nurse. She’s Pregnant. She’s Got COVID-19.](
Amanda Joyce woke up one morning feeling like she’d been slammed onto a wrestling mat, again and again. She reached for her phone and used an app to check her baby’s heart rate. Joyce was five and half months pregnant. [Read more.](
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[How To Get The Most Out Of Your Virtual Medical Appointment](
Here are some tips to help you know when to call your doctor and how to get the most out of your virtual visit. [Read more.](
What We're Reading
Slate | Coronavirus Anxiety Insomnia Is Real
"One problem with the traditional sleep hygiene advice given to insomnia sufferers, which is about schedule, habit, and environment, is that quarantine is upending everyone’s baseline... Without that anchor, I think there are a lot of people maybe sleeping too much time in bed.” Tony Cunningham, a postdoctoral fellow at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School and Boston College. [Read more.](
New York Times Magazine | I’m an E.R. Doctor in New York. None of Us Will Ever Be the Same
"A couple of hours into my shift, one of the nurses comes to me. She falls apart, tears streaming down her inflamed, marked cheeks. She sobs out words of anger and frustration and sadness. The morning, on top of the last several days, has crushed her. I want to hug her, but I can’t." Helen Ouyang. [Read more.](
The Atlantic | Our Pandemic Summer
"The pandemic is not a hurricane or a wildfire. It is not comparable to Pearl Harbor or 9/11. Such disasters are confined in time and space. The SARS-CoV-2 virus will linger through the year and across the world. 'Everyone wants to know when this will end,' said Devi Sridhar, a public-health expert at the University of Edinburgh. 'That’s not the right question. The right question is: How do we continue?'" Ed Yong. [Read more.](
A MESSAGE FROM WBUR
[WBUR health and science reporter Carey Goldberg interviews Dr. Kevin Tabb, president and CEO of Beth Israel Lahey Health, about the upcoming challenges for health care in Massachusetts after the surge ends. She and Dr. Tabb will also answer your questions live during the event.](
This livestream event is free and open to the public, but [advance registration is requested](. Want to submit questions before the event? Go to [slido.com]( and enter event code #WBURVTH2 to send them to us.
Commentary
[I'm Worried About The Psychological Toll On Health Care Workers. They Need Help]( The aftermath of the pandemic on health workers won’t be rosy and will not be ameliorated by applause and idol worship in the media, writes Nancy Rappaport.
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Did you know NIH scientists say N95 masks can be [cleaned at least]( three times — but the FDA is allowing up to 20?
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