A doctor’s plea as Covid-19 runs rampant in Gauteng

'We have to be our own president and lock down our social lives to level 5'

25 June 2021 - 11:41 By Dr Daniel Israel
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Dr Daniel Israel is a general practitioner in Melrose, Johannesburg.
Dr Daniel Israel is a general practitioner in Melrose, Johannesburg.
Image: Supplied

“In the eye of a storm, we don’t go sunbathing. We have to be our own president and lock down our social lives to level 5.”

This is the blunt message from Dr Daniel Israel, a general practitioner in Melrose, Johannesburg, as Covid-19 infections soar in Gauteng and the sick, unable to cope at home, wait for available beds in hospitals as the third wave unfolds in Gauteng.

Inviting family around for Sunday lunch in the belief they are as “safe as we are” might be a decision that ends in grief.

Here, in his own words, is Israel’s message to SA:

If you struggled to imagine what was going on in Wuhan, China, in March 2020 as I did at the time June 2021, Gauteng is your opportunity to vicariously relive that situation. An unexplored virus.

Disproportionate loss and grief. Draconian and now not so draconian measures of hospital isolation of the seriously ill and those homebound with infection.

In the 16 months that have passed since the Wuhan fiasco, the initial knee-jerk lockdown and the economic devastation have disempowered our authorities from implementing harsh enough measures at this sensitive time in Gauteng.

Let me share a few insights about how rampant Covid-19 is in Gauteng at the moment.

My own family medicine practice has diagnosed an excess of 20 cases a day this past week. Each patient requires a careful explanation about appropriate medication, warning signs of deterioration and, most importantly, contact tracing in a desperate attempt to curtail further spread.

Every day, our doctors admit at least one or two patients who simply aren’t coping at home.
Dr Daniel Israel

Every day, our doctors admit at least one or two patients who simply aren’t coping at home. However, admission is no longer a golden bullet.

Patients are often admitted via casualty, where they wait five or six hours for the availability of a normal bed. The fortunate patients who receive direct admission from home to a ward are the select few who manage to access limited hospital resources.

However, being one in 100 patients admitted with Covid-19 at a hospital like Netcare Linksfield Hospital is far from ideal. Provincial statistics are showing 20% to 25% of admitted patients require critical care beds. These beds are full.

Surely these problems affect only “other” people? I will let you decide.

Last week, I admitted a 37-year-old man who isn’t overweight and has no comorbidities. He has spent a week in a top facility, his oxygenation progressing from nasal oxygen to a high-flow system to non-invasive CPAP [continuous positive airway pressure] to a full ventilator.

His prognosis is guarded. Like yours, my Facebook feed is flooded with people sharing their pain about loved ones succumbing to this virus at an untimely stage in their lives.

I’m not a pessimist, and I do see solutions. However, in the eye of a storm, we don’t go sunbathing. We have to be our own president and lock down our social lives to level 5.

I’m not concerned about risk and exposure in parks, zoos or beaches. I’m not significantly concerned about the risk from disciplined visits to controlled institutions with formal interactions, such as bank appointments, doctor appointments, cautious visits to quiet shops and the like. At these monitored times, masks are worn, hands are cleaned and distances are kept.

I’m deeply concerned about all of us who exercise the nth degree of caution in the examples above and then have our siblings over for a Sunday afternoon lunch because “they’re definitely also being as safe as we are”. This is how most Covid-19 patients in my practice have become infected.

I’m the first proponent of relaxing restrictions wherever possible. We are all discouraged by this lockdown existence that has owned us for longer than we can clearly remember. My commitment is to encourage people to live normally as much as possible, but at the appropriate times. However, now isn’t that time.

We need to be smarter than our government and pull in the reins over this surge, which is projected to peak in two to three weeks. We certainly understand that in the longer term, children need human interaction and businesses need to operate. But more importantly, patients requiring oxygen need supplies now.

President Cyril Ramaphosa, please notch up our province similarly, just for a short time, and urgently. Open our vaccine rollout to younger, healthier individuals who are also at risk. Empty vaccine halls don’t save lives. Big business in SA is ready to be given the licence to procure vaccines in parallel.

Finally, let me remind you that waves end, vaccines work, and Covid-19 will certainly pass.

Keep your head up. Be your own president.

TimesLIVE


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