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COVID wave ‘like continuous, unrelenting pressure’

HALIFAX - For intensive care doctor Sarah McMullen, the Omicron wave of COVID-19 seems like a twisting, turning carnival ride, leaving her wondering when she’ll get to step off.
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This October 2021 photo shows children-size doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine. (Photo courtesy Pfizer)

HALIFAX - For intensive care doctor Sarah McMullen, the Omicron wave of COVID-19 seems like a twisting, turning carnival ride, leaving her wondering when she’ll get to step off.

“Right now, what it feels like is similar to when you go to the exhibition and you get on the Scrambler: it feels like continuous, unrelenting pressures from all directions,” the physician at Halifax’s Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre said in an interview Wednesday.

The stress on the health system from the Omicron variant of the novel coronavirus is radically different compared with the other four waves since March 2020, McMullen said. For one thing, there are only a handful of COVID-19 patients in her unit — the largest intensive care centre in Atlantic Canada. Earlier waves brought chaotic scenes as patients took up many of the beds, she said.

But despite causing fewer hospitalizations, the Omicron wave is combined with shortages of staff off sick with COVID-19 or isolating after being exposed to the virus — and a high flow of other gravely ill patients to her ward.

The 46-year-old doctor estimated Wednesday that “two or three” of the 18 beds in her units were occupied with people who contracted the Omicron mutation of the virus. Across the province, there were 11 intensive care patients with COVID-19, less than half the peak of May 18, 2021, when a pandemic high of 25 people were in intensive care with the virus.

In addition, McMullen said COVID-19 patients who are vaccinated often spend just days in the unit, rather than weeks in earlier waves.

According to figures by Nova Scotia Health, about 97 per cent of the 106 available intensive care beds in the province are occupied. The government says the health system has the capacity to add further beds — known as “surge” capacity — if an overflow occurs.

Meanwhile, McMullen says two years of pandemic waves have taken a toll on staff, resulting in some leaving the critical care units, and, for those who remain, a deepening sense of exhaustion.

Intensive care units are tightly tied into the rest of the hospital system, and shortages of staff in one area cascade through the units — creating logjams in patient flow from the ICU to other parts of the hospital, she said.

With about 600 staff off sick or self isolating across the province, and high patient volumes for illnesses other than COVID-19, the pressure to find beds and treatment for patients is “just soaring,” McMullen said.

She says the patients with the most severe symptoms usually aren’t vaccinated. “It (the illness) seems to be a more significant impact in them … folks who are not vaccinated are sicker.”

McMullen adds that the COVID-19 patients she treats who aren’t vaccinated usually are immunocompromised — and have other illnesses the virus is complicating. She said she treats all who arrive in the same way, but she said she finds the anti-vaccination movement disturbing.

“They won’t take care of themselves by getting vaccinated and won’t take care of their loved ones by getting vaccinated, but yet they expect us to keep doing it. It’s extremely frustrating and demoralizing,” she said.

Finally, there is the uncertainty over whether the yet-to-arrive peak of Omicron will again flood her ward. She said she’s cautiously hopeful that perhaps there are signs that hospitalization and infection rates are stabilizing.

But in a world of pandemic predictions that seldom pan out exactly as hoped, the doctor is readying herself for the next potential twist of the medical roller-coaster.

“It’s possible our hospitalization rate is lagging and we haven’t see the true hospitalization rate yet, and so we’re bracing for more admissions, for sure,” she said.