06Jun

We interrupt all the bad news about COVID with this from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation: surviving the virus has improved dramatically since the early days of the pandemic.

The likelihood of someone dying from COVID-19 has declined by a third.

In an interview with Reuters news agency, IHME Director Dr. Christopher Murray said 0.6% of those infected with the virus die, compared to 0.9% last spring. Improvements in treatment, including the use of blood thinners, oxygen and the generic steroid dexamethasone are a large part of the reason for the decline, he said.

Two research studies of patients in New York and in the UK bear out the positive news, finding sharp decreases in mortality.

Published last month in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the New York City study found an 18% decline in COVID deaths since March among 5,121 hospitalizations.

second study released just recently found a 20% decrease in mortality among hospitalized patients in England in June compared to the beginning of the pandemic in April.

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“I would classify this as a silver lining to what has been quite a hard time for many people,” Bilal Mateen, a data science fellow at the Alan Turing Institute in the United Kingdom, told NPR.

Leora Horwitz, M.D., an author of the New York City study, echoed those findings. “We find that the death rate has gone down substantially,” she told NPR. “I do think this is good news,” she said, adding, “but it does not make the coronavirus a benign illness.”

The Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation, based at the University of Washington, cautions that with the advancing winter months, it expects the infection rate globally to increase to 4 million new cases a day. It estimates daily deaths will reach over 15,000 a day in mid-January declining to under 13,000 by March 1.

“If universal mask coverage (95%) were attained [by last week], our model projects 571,000 lives could be saved by March 1, 2021,” the Institute said in its weekly global report.

Specifically in the United States, another Institute report predicts “daily deaths to reach 2,200 in mid-January and slowly decline to 1,750 on March 1… we expect daily infections to reach 325,000 by early January.”

Estimating national mask use at 67% — lower than many other organizations have found – the IHME report projects the US could save 68,000 lives by March 1 if 95% of the population wore masks.

CDC report released at the end of October said that as of June, 88.7% of the US population wore masks. Even among the youngest group surveyed, those 18-29, 86.1% wore masks.

Photo by Online Marketing on Unsplash

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Jun 6, 2023

In Recognition of Surgical Technologists

When COVID-19 forced hospitals and surgical centers to halt elective procedures the surgical technologists who do the prep work and assist the surgeons shifted from the operating room to everywhere else they were needed.

In more normal times, surgical techs spend much of the workday on their feet. They prep operating rooms and lay out the equipment to be used. They are also the ones responsible for ensuring everything is sterile and stays that way during a surgery.

They keep track of the instruments, counting them and making sure none become contaminated. When the procedure is over, they may help dress incisions and prepare the patient to be moved to the recovery room.

When operating rooms went dark except for emergencies, technologists showed just how essential they are, jumping in to help care for the influx of coronavirus patients, expanding sterile areas to all public areas and providing relief to other, overworked healthcare professionals.

To honor them during National Surgical Technologists Week which began Sunday, the Association of Surgical Technologists asked its members to tell of the essential work they’ve been doing during this pandemic.

Here are two stories:

  • Surgical tech Colleen Lorenz said she and her fellow techs “participated in the Incident Command call center realigning staffing resources, helped screenings at hospital entrances and helped sew masks for the community.”
  • Kelsea Renninger, a labor and delivery surgical technologist, says pandemic or not, mothers were giving birth and she was there. “I have worked during the hardest hit times of COVID-19, most times working overtime throughout the week, and I won’t change it for the world.”

Green Key Resources is proud of the work surgical technologists do. We join with Americans everywhere to thank them for always being there.

Photo by Austin Distel on Unsplash

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Jun 6, 2023

Join Us In Honoring Nurses This Special Week

More than ever, this is a time to recognize and honor the nurses of the world. Not only does National Nurses Week begin Wednesday, but in recognition of the bicentenary of the birth of Florence Nightingale, the entire year has been designated as the International Year of the Nurse and the Midwife.

Her memory is being honored in a way that would make Florence Nightingale incredibly proud of the profession she founded. All across the world, and especially here in the US, nurses have responded to the call, working tirelessly, often without a break, to care for those sickened by the coronavirus.

When New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other leaders called for help, tens of thousands of retired and administrative and medical office nurses came forward. Many are providing direct patient care. Others are filling support jobs. All are on the frontline in this pandemic.

Two hundred years ago, Nightingale was also on the frontline of battle. Born May 12, 1820 to wealth, she left a comfortable home and comfortable life in Britain to care for soldiers in the far off Crimea, making rounds so often at night with only a candle she came to be known as the “Lady with the lamp.”

Today’s nurses are practicing Nightingale’s caring and compassion in the face of the worst health crisis in a century and demonstrating to the world what it means to be a nurse.

To all the nurses, we at Green Key Resources say, Thank You for your service.

Photo by Museums Victoria on Unsplash

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