Wednesday 17 June 2020

Doctors and Covid-19 - Iñigo 4º Primary


INTRODUCTION

I have decided to write about doctors because they are professionals that instead of being worried about themselves, they worry about us. Also, I have focused on the Intensive Care Units, also known as ICU.

I had the idea after interviewing Dr. Carlos F, boss of the ICU in the Clinic Hospital of Barcelona, one of the most prestigious hospitals in Europe, and with Marcos’ Dad, our school partner.

We are going to talk about the following aspects of the medicine in this article:
The Spanish Health System, The medicine specialties, the ICUs and the interview with Dr. Carlos F.

Dr. Carlos F


 THE SPANISH HEALTH SYSTEM

The Spanish Health system has three characteristics:

1-      It is a universal system ( every Spanish inhabitant has the right to be looked after )
2-      There is a network of centres of primary attention (known in Cataluña as CAPs) and,
3-      They have a system for public health and a private one.


THE MEDICINE SPECIALITIES

In Spain, there are 3.8 doctors for every 1.000 habitants. This is a low number compared to neighboring countries like France where there are more than 10/1.000 ratio.
There are 790 hospitals, of which 340 are public. 158.000 beds (297 per habitant), of which 4.404 are ICU beds.
In Spain, there are more than 30 health specialties, including diagnostical specialties.

THE ICU

The Intensive Care Unit is one special installation inside the hospital that ensures intensive medicine. When patients enter intensive care, they have a bad condition of health that puts their lives at risk and one that requires constant monitoring of their vital signs and other parameters, like the liquid control.
The two important criteria for the admission of patients into the ICU are one, to elevate the level of care and two, be recoverable patients.



INTERVIEW WITH DR. CARLOS F

To know more about the intensive care unit, I have interviewed Dr. Carlos F.

Q: Can you tell us your specialty and where do you work?

A: I am an anesthetist and I work in the Clinic Hospital of Barcelona. One of the 20 best hospitals in the world. I am the boss of the ICU of the Hospital. What we do here is receive patients that are very sick. Half of them come out of important surgeries, others come from accidents.

Q: When you were a child did you want to become a doctor?

A: From very young, I wanted to become a doctor because almost all my family were on the sanitary branch. When I was your age, I started to read things about medicine.

Q: Was it very difficult to study medicine?

A: The difficult thing about medicine is not the university. There are more difficult universities like Engineering. The difficult thing is to enter the university. There are only a few places for a lot of candidates. You need to study a lot before the university, to have a great degree, and enter the medical university. During university, you need to dedicate study hours. If you study and you know the theory, in the exams you will do it great. It´s not like in engineering where they give you a problem and for all that you have study, maybe you answer it wrong.

Q: Can you describe an ICU unit?

A: It’s like a big stage with closed bedrooms. Everyone for a patient and it looks like an airplane cabin. There is one bed and a lot of screens. With that, we can see everything that occurs to the patient, externally and internally. In the head, the heart…We have all the body monitored. A lot of the patients are anesthetized. We put stickers on the face to know how much asleep they are having. We measure how the heart works. The heart carries the blood with oxygen to all the parts of the body. We measure the oxygen that goes to the cells. We measure how the lungs are breeding. We measure how the kidney works…

Q: What does your day look like?

A: We work from 8:00 am to 16:00, except the ward days in which we work 24 hours in a row.
At 8:00am, we have a meeting in which we talk and discuss about all the patients we have. How were the last 24 hours? What we are going to do with them? If we are going to change something about the treatment? If we are going to let them breathe on their own?
At 9:00 am, we visit them.
At 12:00, we have another meeting, when we go all together bedroom per bedroom together with the nurses and we share opinions. The opinion of a doctor can be wrong but when a lot of doctors think together, it is more difficult to do mistakes.
At 14:00, we inform families.
When we finish, we write and describe what we have done with all the patients.
We are one doctor for every 3 or 4 patients. In the ICU Clinic, we have 48 beds.

Q: Have you had a lot of changes in your every day with the COVID 19?

A: A lot. For you to have an idea, we usually have 48 beds in the ICU. Over these three months, we have increased from 48 to 170 beds. We multiplied per three. With patients extremely sick, there was no treatment. It was only vital support.

Q: Now, is it getting better?

A: A lot better than before. Now, we have come back to the 48 beds of ICU that we have and we don´t have any more patients with coronavirus. Before we had 160 patients, all of them of with coronavirus. Now, zero.

That has been thanks to social distancing and good weather.

Q: You think that we will overcome this pandemic?

A: Of course, like we have overcome others. In fact, we already defeated it. The important thing is that it will not happen again. We are more prepared.

CONCLUSION

The ICUs are the last layer to save lives.

Despite having less than 5.000 beds in the ICU. Spain has defeated this terrible pandemic of COVID 19 and that has been possible thanks to excellent professionals like Dr. Carlos F and our great health system.