Researchers To Doctors: Stop Putting COVID-19 Patients On Invasive Ventilators (statnews.com) 126
Rei writes: A paper recently published by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene adds further support to recent CDC guidelines for minimizing the use of invasive ventilators. As physicians had been voicing concern that doctors were being too eager to put patients on invasive ventilation and may be doing more harm than good, the investigators looked into outcomes of intubated patients vs. non-intubated patients experiencing hypoxia. Unlike with other forms of pneumonia, they found that COVID-19 patients were unusually damaged by invasive ventilation but also able to tolerate higher levels of anoxia -- to the point that one doctor recalls having to tell patients to get off their cellphones so that they could be intubated. The recommendation is that guidelines be adjusted to discourage invasive ventilation unless a patient is physically struggling to breathe, rather than relying strictly on oxygen levels; otherwise, the use of non-invasive ventilation, such as CPAP and BiPAP, should be encouraged. When invasive ventilation is used, oxygen levels should be minimized in order to reduce the risk of damaging healthy tissue.
HMMM (Score:1, Insightful)
after everyone bitching about Tesla only shipping cpap/bipap machines...
Not looking like giving oxygen even helps (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Not looking like giving oxygen even helps (Score:4, Informative)
Well perhaps keeping their mouths lower than their lung to promote drainage and creating an atmosphere that best serves clearing their lungs and minimises the harms of infection, substance infused steams focusing on minimising the symptoms and being somewhat weakly antibiotic to avoid negative reactions. A slightly pressurised bag over the head, drawing in air, medically conditioning it and then exhausting and filtering it, larger bag better than smaller, with regard to air motion and steam generation, more stable an efficient and room for drainage. Let them look at a video monitor for mood stabilisation to promote positive release of sustaining and repairing bodily functions.
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It's a wet sponge scenario - that is not going to work unfortunately.
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I'm on blood thinners. Have been for years, will be for the rest of my life... where do you get the idea that this is extremely dangerous?
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Oh, I don't know, maybe in the fact that blood thinners are literally used to make it harder for blood to clot? Normally a good thing when prescribed to prevent clotting in veins, but a damn bad thing when you want blood flow to stop from injuries. That's why surgeries and major dental work all ask if you are on thinners, and will work with your doctor to either lower the dose or take you off temporarily so you don't bleed out and die if they can't induce clotting.
So instead of lungs filling up with fluids
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Blood clotting seems to be the largest issue.
No it doesn't. It seems to be *a* issue but it's reported in a minuscule number of patients and is a comparatively tiny source of the mortality related to the virus.
The Washington Post (I assume you base all your scientific knowledge on what you read in the media) did a story on it covering a small selection without any data or figures behind it, so there's no basis for considering it the largest issue, or even an issue worth targeting compared to many of the others.
Blood clots in general don't kill people.
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Since very early on it's been clear from the stats that COVID-19 disproportionately affects people with cardiovascular issues. This is why it's far less deadly for children than the flu is, about as deadly for people in the 20 - 40 range, but increasingly significantly more deadly for older people.
Nowadays a lot of first aid taught says not to even bother trying CPR on young children, a) because it's harder to do without doing more damage, and b) because the odds of kids having a cardiovascular issue is qui
Actually a very good thing (Score:4, Insightful)
For those of us still alive, it looks like we learned something about treatment. This is very good news. I hope we find a way to eliminate the virus but until then I'll settle for treatment advances.
Re:Actually a very good thing (Score:5, Insightful)
For those of us still alive, it looks like we learned something about treatment.
And for those who had any doubt, this is yet another reason why "flattening the curve" is a good idea: each month that passes the treatments get better.
Re:Actually a very good thing (Score:4, Interesting)
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AFAICT, plagues have hit humans about ever 50-150 years since we have been able to write history. That's just long enough to forget previous lessons
Next up: why inflation is a bad thing.
Re:Actually a very good thing (Score:5, Informative)
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True. Viruses can't grow on masks. GP probably confused viruses and bacteria.
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Masks do not work... Please try to get your information from the surgeon general and the WHO and stop repeating false claims.
Surgeon General, April 14: "Wearing a cloth face covering correctly can help prevent the spread of #COVID19 to others." https://twitter.com/Surgeon_Ge... [twitter.com]
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For those of us still alive, it looks like we learned something about treatment.
And for those who had any doubt, this is yet another reason why "flattening the curve" is a good idea: each month that passes the treatments get better.
Indeed. Very obvious, yet for some reason many people cannot even think _that_ far.
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For those of us still alive, it looks like we learned something about treatment.
Some of us learnt something about doctors more than about treatments. Here locally in Europe ventilation has always used only as a last resort after O2 therapy fails to raise blood O2 levels. It's almost like the article is implying that some doctors somewhere get trigger happy with ventilators (no doubt they do, medical science isn't universal and people are of different skills and opinions all the time).
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It seems to me that doctors were putting peeps on ventilators when they couldn't get the O2 levels to the right number using other standard methods. Protocol is apparently is to then ventilate. TFA is saying that may not be the correct protocol.
But yeah, I get that "trigger-happy doctors" is a better soundbite.
As a bonus, I'll include a bit from one of the TFAs...
What’s driving this reassessment is a baffling observation about Covid-19: Many patients have blood oxygen levels so low they should be dead. But they’re not gasping for air, their hearts aren’t racing, and their brains show no signs of blinking off from lack of oxygen.
That is making critical care physicians suspect that blood levels of oxygen, which for decades have driven decisions about breathing support for patients with pneumonia and acute respiratory distress, might be misleading them about how to care for those with Covid-19.
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So, just... (Score:4, Funny)
...because 80% of them die you want us to stop?
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...because 80% of them die you want us to stop?
I know you're being facetious, but yeah, because only 20% of the people who they don't intubate die. :-) Okay, I'm exaggerating. I don't remember the actual numbers (I read about this last night and can't find the details right now), but it seems like it was something like half again more deaths for people intubated than not (after adjusting from severity of symptoms).
The approach that seems to be most effective, from what I've read, is increasing the availability of oxygen without intubation [uchicagomedicine.org]. Specificall
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face down.
Didn't it used to be a really bad thing to lie down when you had pneumonia?
Just what do they teach them in these medical schools these days?
I'm worried right wing media will run with this (Score:1, Troll)
I seriously doubt patients were being Intubated at a rate 50 times necessary.
Re:I'm worried right wing media will run with this (Score:4, Insightful)
to tell everybody we have enough ventilators when we don't. Last I heard we had about 1/50th the ventilators we'd need if we "let 'er rip" and reopen early like the right wing want to. This new guideline will reduce the use of ventilators, not eliminate it. I seriously doubt patients were being Intubated at a rate 50 times necessary.
Or you could react with some humility. Even the "good" people haven't been right about everything through this. One day, masks are useless or even counter productive. The next day, they are ordering us to wear them. One day, every severe case needs a ventilator. The next day, oops, maybe not, maybe that's sometimes counter productive.
Nobody in this doesn't have some egg on their face. WHO uncritically tweeted Chinese stuff about there being no person to person transmission in January. NYC mayor was telling everybody to not worry about this and go enjoy Chinese new year, and later still telling everyone not to worry and go get out on the town.
Nobody in this doesn't have some egg on their face. Drop the political stuff about your opponents all being evil idiots. It's stupid at the best of times, and really stupid and offensive right now.
Re:I'm worried right wing media will run with this (Score:4, Informative)
WHO uncritically tweeted Chinese stuff about there being no person to person transmission in January.
The entire tweet was:
Preliminary investigations conducted by the Chinese authorities have found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of the novel #coronavirus (2019-nCoV) identified in #Wuhan, #China.
Long story short, they didn't say there was no human-to-human transmission. They said it hadn't been confirmed [businessinsider.com].
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If doctors and nurses were truly just sitting around and hospitals have extra capacity, then that's a good argument for opening things back up.
Hospitals are laying people off.
But I'm not hearing that. I'm hearing them complaining about lack of PPE and tests.
What does the quality of the media, and in particular your poor choices regarding which media you pay attention to, have to do with this?
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Look -- I know people LOVE to frame all of this as "Conservative right-wing nutjobs" vs "Leftist Commie tax and spenders".
But all the political labeling aside? I'm learning more towards the "open it back up" crowd after seeing far too much evidence that this has become a big money grab for some people, and just baseless fear for others.
Your first bit is kind of wise. Look in both the USA and Australia states and there are plenty of "right wing" rulers (Governors) who are doing a reasonably good job here, probably even most of them. Look throughout the world and the same is true of Left wing. Angela Merkel, the right wing ruler of Germany is doing a great job, having converted one of the worst situations in the world into one of the best. However there's a specific class of populist right wing politician which is being universally awfu
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I don't think you should be moderated "troll". While your statements and conclusions are eminently arguable, they do echo valid questions or concerns.
FYI, I checked out one of the links that AleRunner provided. It's pretty interesting. The applet in the article vaguely reminds me of the "life" program, although this one is about death.
https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com]
Aesop's fable (Score:2)
This reminds me of a story a guy named Aesop was telling me recently about a miller taking his donkey to the market.
ER Doc Here (Score:5, Informative)
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Rats. We were doing so well speculating away here. The sobering of real information is bittersweet.
Seriously,
volume of air pushed into the lung could be more precisely controlled
Makes great sense, but how do you know how much is the right amount? Do the ventilators carefully sense resistance, in case there's increasing inflammation / atelectesis and decreasing available alveoli volume?
Re:ER Doc Here (Score:4, Informative)
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Yes, they do. Ventilators have a tough job - they have to sense when the person wants to breathe, then force air in, sense when the person stops breathing in and stops forcing air in. Then they must carefully monitor the exhausted air to detect when the person wants to breathe again.
You canoot do this
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Oh, and thank you thank you!!! For being a Dr., for helping people, for posting here. Wish I could do something to help (besides running some folding @ home clients).
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I have been sleeping with such a mask for a decade or so. Even with an outflow filter it still would leak at the face sealing.
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Re:ER Doc Here (Score:4, Informative)
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The real question (Score:2)
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They should be put in a hyperbaric chamber instead. That would avoid damaging the lungs and help with saturation.
What were the Italian machines? (Score:3)
In the videos (long ago it seems now...) from Italy during their crisis it seems they put the patients in cylindrical mylar tents over their faces and nothing in their mouths. What were these and did they work better or worse? They don't look like anything I see here.
Carbon dioxide (Score:2)
And I was ridiculed for my earlier post (Score:2)
https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]
Pathetic /., pathetic.
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Yep. Someone even thought that your mod of "1" was overrated :)
You win the Cassandra award for today.
CPAP and BiPAP must be bad. (Score:2)
It's about money and politics, not patient health (Score:1)
Ventilators have become a politicized talking point and hospitals are able to bill massive charges to insurance companies for using ventilators while continuing to push the narrative that treating covid requires emergency services which are easily overwhelmed by capacity spikes but it's well known medically that the majority of respiratory issues associated with covid can be treated posturally without invasive ventilation, but there's no bonus billable procedure and no need for emergency care to push for mo
Hyperbarics (Score:2)
Hyperbarics is a much better solution to low O2 saturation.
Now to get more of those machines....
Re:Do, don't, do, don't (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Do, don't, do, don't (Score:5, Insightful)
If only science was as exact and precise as science journalism is!
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One reason Science and Public Policy are not really the best suited partners.
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We rapidly pass 60,000 cases in under 5 days.
My models went from 142k dead by august to end of year when Fauci made that prediction to 192k this morning to 201k tonight.
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Actually, with few exceptions, AFAIK, we're nowhere near the end of ventilator capacity. Dialysis capacity, on the other hand, is turning out to be more problematic, from what I'm reading lately.
The reason for this is that even after adjusting for severity of illness, people on ventilators had a significantly higher rate of death and significantly more severe lung damage. As I understand it (I was reading a lot about this subject just last night, but IANAD, so I could be misunderstanding), the problem is
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Ventilators are not what you want to put into a patient. Not by any stretch. It's putting a foreign body into an area that is highly susceptible to infections, and you can't even sterilize it properly. That's an infection waiting to happen and something you only do as a last resort action when the alternative is to let that patient die, where you accept the near-certain infection as the necessary evil to keep the patient alive.
So ventilating a person WAS already something you don't do lightly, it's the resp
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So ventilating a person WAS already something you don't do lightly, it's the respiratory equivalent of treating a heart problem with a transplantation, it's what you do when you're at your wit's end and all other options have been tried. It's by no means a first line treatment.
Do you really think they just now "discovered" that it's a bad idea? More over, what the hell is the alternative? We're already talking about a treatment that's basically the alternative to death.
The problem is that this disease behaves very differently from other diseases. As a result, oxygen levels that would be "Oh crap, this patient is about to die" levels with influenza correspond with patients talking on their cell phones and behaving normally with COVID-19. This almost makes me wonder if this is a measurement artifact where somehow the virus mucks with the way O2 sat is measured or something, but I'm just thinking out loud here. The point is that the usual thresholds below which hospitals
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This almost makes me wonder if this is a measurement artifact where somehow the virus mucks with the way O2 sat is measured or something, but I'm just thinking out loud here.
Indeed. Would be interesting to know how diverse the sensors used are. Very likely, they do not measure directly but measure some other parameter and translate that to O2. It is possible that translation is broken here.
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Not very diverse.
The more I look into it, the more I think I'm onto something here. There's something called pseudohypoxemia [nih.gov] that can occur in cases of severe anemia or various other blood cell disorders, where the white blood cell count is significantly elevated (leukocytosis). And leukocytosis is a common symptom in coronavirus patients. So it could very well be the case that they have been massively over-intubating patients because the arterial blood gas analysis is, in fact, lying to them.
The way to
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Well, it seems intubation is bad as done initially. On the other hand, it seems either the measurement of blood oxygen are wrong, or for some reason a really low blood Oxygen score is far less of a problem for Covid-19 sufferers, possibly because blood CO2 is still low for them. This may eventually lead to better protocols for intubation in general. At this time, the practitioners in the ERs and ICUs have noticed something is really off and that is also good. Of course, experimenting with peoples lives is s
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I have some fingertip sensors. It's just a red LED and sensor, one on each side of a finger, toe, ear, and maybe a color filter. So it's just measuring the color variation. You know, oxygenated blood is red, lacking O2 it's purple/blue. I'll do some analysis sometime. Need to borrow a color densitometer.
Ever since I've seen them I've wondered how they can work without calibration. And how can they compensate for varying skin color, density, whatever else might mess with the reading. Need to do some r
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Ever since I've seen them I've wondered how they can work without calibration. And how can they compensate for varying skin color, density, whatever else might mess with the reading.
They probably measure some differential. These tend to be less sensitive to other factors. "Tend" being the operative word here.
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I think you're on to it. It would be impossible to measure an absolute / static number without frequent calibration. Which wouldn't be difficult. But yeah, it has to be a difference measurement. I know color is involved. More research needed...
Re:Am I the only one that thinks the timing is odd (Score:5, Interesting)
My dad passed away 6 months ago, and I believe the main problem was excess O2. I've been doing some research. He had all the symptoms of oxygen toxicity. He was never on a "ventilator", but Bi-PAP much of the time, and they really pushed O2. They wanted to see 100% on the "pulse-ox". I tried to question it but got summarily (maybe rudely) rebuffed.
Which leads me to: I wonder if the "pulse-ox" sensor and readings are wrong for COVID-19 patients? Somehow the disease messes with the ability to read O2 using the typical optical sensor?
The increased clotting kind of supports my theory that COVID-19 messes with hemoglobin / blood chemistry. And look at how some blood types are less susceptible to the virus.
Regardless, if the "pulse-ox" meter says 50% O2 sat., and the patient is not only alive, but alert and talking on a phone, I doubt the readings. Pushing lots more O2 is likely to drive hyperoxia and cause much damage, but you don't know it until it's too late (like my poor dad).
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK430743/ [nih.gov]
Regarding the pressure, okay, ianad either, but know a lot and should have gone to med school... Anyway, so "pneumonia" is not a disease as such, but a condition of lung problems- mostly inflammation- caused by a disease. So if you understand the lungs to be billions of tiny air sacs (alveoli) all packed together. If you inflame the walls of the sacs, you can envision that they can't inflate as much as they used to. And, the inflammation and thickening makes them less efficient. So as you can see, it's a quick downward spiral.
When the inflammation gets bad enough, the sacs collapse- called "atelectasis". Trying to force air pressure into them only damages them further, causing, yep, you guessed it, more inflammation.
Oh, and then you get pulmonary edema, pleural effusion, pulmonary embolisms, and ...
I've read several references saying that Bi-PAP is much much better. There were stories (maybe on here too?) about "hacking" a C-PAP machine into a Bi-PAP machine with some firmware changes.
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IANAD (But I actually do know a lot about this topic)
A few questions, you mentioned a Bipap, but you didn't mention oxygen. Was the there oxygen also attached? Do you remember the flow rate (X LPM)?
I don't think it would mess with pulseox's, if only because an early symptom is shortness of breath.
Even highflow O2 (>5LPM) is pretty safe. The oxygen isn't actually 100% pure, and the patient is still getting mostly normal air, it is just supplementing the O2 in the air.
People aren't going to die or even
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Thank you. Awesome that you know a lot about this stuff. I wish I worked in medicine / Dr.
People aren't going to die or even pass out with a pulse ox of 50%
I want to believe you, now I'm conflicted. I'm not sure where I read it, but it was a Dr. who said they were surprised the COVID-19 patient was awake or even alive at 50% pulse-ox, while patient was talking on a phone.
Yes, I know about BiPAP/CPAP, but good for others who might not know.
I assume you were asking about my dad. He had never been on O2, and was 100% independent, driving his car, everything normal. Well
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I'm sorry for your loss, it seems extra difficult since issues went on for a while.
Yeah, I was trying to find a source for how low sats can go and have the patient alive/awake, but I couldn't find anything. I know I've seen sleep studies where the patient got into the 50's, but they obviously weren't awake.
The oxygen toxicity paper was interesting, but they do note several other common conditions that would produce the same symptoms. But they do state that it can lead to carbon dioxide narcosis. But that
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but alert and talking on a phone
The word you're missing is coherent. People can do all sorts of things when on low O2. The summary itself said the doctor had to ask a patient to get off the phone, which certainly sounds like the kind of thing you have to ask someone in a dazed and confused state (a symptom of low O2).
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A sincere thank you for doing useful thinking about what happened to your father, and for sharing it... you are moving the world in a good direction.
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I think it's likely that the O2 readings are correct, and as near as I can tell, there are other side effects to having low O2 in the blood, but this whole revelation is basically about how patients are managing with lower O2 levels and invasive methods are probably doing more harm than good. There isn't even any gasping for air, because the lungs are still healthy enough for you to exhale, and it doesn't trigger the brain's CO2 panic sensor.
I'm sorry about what happened to your Dad. Advocating against the
Re: Am I the only one that thinks the timing is od (Score:2)
There's more to it than that. I don't doubt that lack of a insurance is a major exacerbation to this problem in the US, but here in the UK where we have universal healthcare free at the point of delivery, BAME people are also disproportionately affected by Covid-19.
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Then published?
Rather than trusting what was said by less advanced nations experts?
Re: Am I the only one that thinks the timing is od (Score:2)
Obvious race hate troll is obvious
You aren't seriously that stupid are you? (Score:5, Informative)
Stop spreading this anti-science crap. I don't know if you're doing it on purpose or just don't understand that you're undermining people's faith in medicine and doctors. I don't care. Stop it. You're going to get people killed.
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This. Some people cannot control the stupid even if their lives depend on it.
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If doctors aren't expecting to get paid, why don't you cancel your insurance and offer not to pay and then see whether they put you on a ventilator. The self deception around here is staggering.
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You don't understand intubation. It isn't a doctor intubating. It is a phalanx of nurses, techs, doctors, etc. doing all the necessary procedures around intubation that are required. I doubt any hospital is recouping intubation costs even when in normal times.
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If doctors aren't expecting to get paid, why don't you cancel your insurance and offer not to pay and then see whether they put you on a ventilator.
If you show up to a hospital with COVID-19, you'll get treatment, whatever treatment is required, regardless of ability to pay. If you have insurance, sure, they'll bill it, later. But they'll figure that out later. According to multiple doctors and nurses that I know personally, they're not even asking about insurance during intake, and definitely not making treatment decisions based on it.
Re: You aren't seriously that stupid are you? (Score:1)
What exactly do you think he is promoting?
Hospitals make more on patients then those they turn away sure.
People who say need treatment certainly make hospitals more too!
Iâ(TM)ve had pneumonia and survived. Itâ(TM)s not a big deal.
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Itâ(TM)s not a big deal.
I have burned my skin and survived. Not a big deal.
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I don't know if you're doing it on purpose or just don't understand that you're undermining people's faith in medicine and doctors.
By "medicine," you mean treatment of symptoms as opposed to prevention (much less actual healing) and by "doctors," you refer to those folks with barely-above-average IQ's whose entire education consists of memorizing the world's largest flow chart. Granted, they'll no longer try to "let out the ill humors;" they've got far worse in their toolchests now.
Re: On cell phones ? (Score:2)
They use blood oxygen to make that decision. I'm wondering whether something about this makes it hard to get oxygen in but still possible to get CO2 out.
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It sounds like something about this makes it hard to accurately read oxygen levels (making doctors do stupid things apparently)
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Belabored breathing comes from CO2 build-up. That's why people commit suicide with natural gas; their body dumps CO2 fine, so they feel fine, but their O2 levels drop until they lose consciousness. On the other hand you can have plenty of O2 in your blood, but if you're breathing CO2 it feels like you're suffocating.
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Yes, that's exactly what's happening, apparently. Forgive my recall of the details—I don't have a link at hand—but as I remember it, lungs are coated in extra mucus but not otherwise damaged, so the lungs are still elastic and you're perfectly capable of exhaling, but the oxygen doesn't cross into the blood properly. So you exhale CO2 without issue and you get tired and fall asleep a lot because of your low oxygen levels.
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"Struggling to breathe" is a symptom, not a diagnosis. What matters is your blood oxygen level. That can be lowered because your diaphragm is weakened. Or the elasticity of lung tissue changes. Or your lung tissue permeability decreases. Or your oxygen-hemoglobin binding ability changes. Or your lungs are filling with fluid. Or a stroke in a certain part of the brain.
I'm not a doctor, but even I'm aware of all these. There must be more.
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"Struggling to breathe" is a symptom, not a diagnosis. What matters is your blood oxygen level.
Having watched both my parents die from COPD (smokers), their problem wasn't getting O2 in, but getting the CO2 out. Giving them oxygen raised their levels just fine. But the CO2 would build up unless they were on a B-PAP. Also, the finger monitor tells O2, but it takes a blood test and an hour wait (on a good day) to determine CO2. Which is probably why doctors aren't checking it.
I walked my mother into the E.R. because she was having difficulty breathing. They gave her a "breathing treatment". After
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Monty Python and the Holy Grail "I'm not dead yet" scene comes to mind.
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Monty Python and the Holy Grail "I'm not dead yet" scene comes to mind.
It's not that uncommon. I have been ferried to A&E with blue lights, siren, with the gas floored in the middle of a residential area, etc - the works.
The paramedic screaming down the radio: "I cannot get his pulse, I cannot get his blood pressure".
Hospital dispatch:"Is he breathing?"
Paramedic:"He is talking"
It is not an experience you want to repeat though. It is "fun" once. With big quotes. So yeah, I can believe in "get off your phone so I can intubate you".
If you are wondering WTF can get you
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"Too early" only makes sense if you have statistics about endpoints with different variants of intervention.
It just seems - now that we are beginning to have more experience with covid-19 patients - that the parameters that usually ask for an intervention by invasive ventilation have a different meaning with covid-19 patients.
That's a difficult situation in so far, as "usually" these parameters mean that the patient likely would die without ventilation.
I think that - on top of all the things we learned with
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"Too early" only makes sense if you have statistics about endpoints with different variants of intervention.
It just seems - now that we are beginning to have more experience with covid-19 patients - that the parameters that usually ask for an intervention by invasive ventilation have a different meaning with covid-19 patients.
Intubation is fundamentally a dangerous procedure, mostly because it involves general anesthesia, which itself is always dangerous when the patient isn't healthy to begin with. So that's what has to be balanced against the guessed risk of CV19.
That's a difficult situation in so far, as "usually" these parameters mean that the patient likely would die without ventilation.
Well, it's not a binary choice. Patients with low oxy levels need some kind of help, but other options may help with lower risks. Pronation by itself sometimes does wonders, without having to put someone under.
I think that - on top of all the things we learned within this year "thanks" to corona, we'll now learn a lot about ventilation.
For sure. I think a year from now once doctors have ha
SLASHRETARDS (Score:1)
This is what happens when you hire a bunch of third graders and chimpanzees to spew diarrhea headlines and pat themselves on the back for it.
Slashdead: Last month's news next week!
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Re:You mean the Rockefeller created CDC? (Score:5, Insightful)
Lol, it's always about shadowy people in your country - and only your country - pulling the strings, seeking to enslave you and your kin to fulfill their Nefarious Goals, whatever they may be.
Here's a stunning revelation for you: Nobody gives a fuck about you, good or bad, whether you,personally, live or die. You are vastly overestimating your importance in all of this. So if you want to believe the CDC is pushing big pharma and death agendas, go right ahead.
Personally, I would prefer to believe that there is a global collective of health professionals all working like maniacs to determine the best way to treat COVID-19. Because it sure looks that way in Europe and Britain and Canada and Russia and China and Japan and Singapore and Australia and New Zealand, and in just about every other developed (and underdeveloped) nation on Earth.
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Most professionals in the SARS-CoV-2 fight in the U.S. are working diligently with no outside agenda. It is the alleged administration that is filled with professional grifters attempting to funnel gov. money to their private business concerns.
Re: (Score:2)
They all really need to get their shit together.
https://xkcd.com/1274/ [xkcd.com]