Back to the 21st century
After 3 weeks on the ventilator, Elvira got extubated. A team including her doctor, nurse, and Connie, one of her daughters, told Elvira that her 28-year-old son had died of COVID. I began telepsychiatry with Elvira and her two daughters. Treatment continued after Elvira returned home. In telephone sessions, we discussed bereavement and how to cope with the emotional and physical challenges in recovery.
Before he contracted COVID, Tony, Elvira’s son, had compromised health. He was on dialysis awaiting a kidney transplant. His mother prepared his meals and often accompanied Tony to doctor appointments. Still, Elvira said, “I wasn’t there to hold his hand.” At age 71, Elvira was also at high risk. She suffered from diabetes, high blood pressure, hyperlipidemia, and had coronary stents. Elvira was compliant with medications for her conditions.
What we know; where we are
“Infectious diseases are not static conditions but depend upon a constantly changing relationship between parasite and invaded species which is bound to result in modifications of both clinical and epidemiological manifestations.”
Hans Zinsser, Rats, Lice and History
We need to be informed by history and grateful to the geniuses who brought us into the modern age of medicine. We can prevent diseases with public health measures, and by understanding and treating crises. Edward Jenner, who recognized the protective effect of cowpox against smallpox, developed inoculations beginning in 1796; he ushered in immunology and saved the lives of millions. Smallpox is now eradicated. A succession of microbe hunters, including Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch, benefited from the development of the microscope by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. With the advent and use of penicillin in the early 1940s, Alexander Fleming welcomed antibiotics; by the 1960s this modality became widespread. In the mid-20th century, immunologists recognized that bacteria and viruses change and adapt to the environment.
The planet has seen ravaging pandemics that then dissipated and, although untreatable at the time, disappeared into a reservoir, such as rats or lice. People also developed herd immunity from exposure to the offending microorganisms within the population. Less toxic, these agents no longer kill those who get infected but they can be transmissible and endemic to humans.
The mental health consequences of pandemics are reminiscent of other severe illnesses. The seriously ill develop cognitive aberrations and can become delirious. The population at risk and those who get sick can experience depression, PTSD, and anxiety – including panic.
Update on Elvira
Elvira continues to improve. She also participates in support groups, including one that addresses bereavement for parents of children who died of COVID and other causes. “I didn’t have a chance to say goodbye,” she said. But what she calls her “brain fog” has dissipated. She walks better, and she is getting evaluation of radiculopathy, probably from nerve root injury during her 3 weeks in bed on the ventilator. She’s still experiencing pain in her feet.
With regard to her symptoms she said: “I cry almost every day.” Her PTSD has abated, but she sometimes has nightmares. Elvira is writing a book about the induced coma and the “hallucinations from hell to heaven” she experienced. She wonders:“Did Tony go through the same thing?” Her empathy is enhanced by her background as a retired social worker with the Administration for Children’s Services in New York.