Problems, problems, problems and trying to vacation anyway

For the first time in over a month, I have a free afternoon and I’m not ridiculously sick. It’s been such a hard month! And being sick was not even the half of it.

Where shall we start? Let’s start with the family drama. To all you parents out there – you know when your adult kid is contemplating doing something so obviously misguided that everyone (everyone!) knows it’s going to be a guaranteed disaster, but you’re powerless to stop it?

I’m sure my own parents have felt that way about some of the decisions I’ve made in my life! Well, it’s even worse is when it’s your kid’s partner who is the driver behind the catastrophic idea – because, let’s face it, we have less influence with their partners.

Guen latched onto a dream – a beautiful, ambitious, jaw-droppingly risky, and ultimately entirely unrealistic dream. She started down that road – and at first I watched warily, trying to stay neutral, expecting the grand idea to soon dissolve into the mist as completely unattainable dreams tend to do – but Guen is one determined cookie. (We have that in common.) Then I kept waiting for Callan to step in before all was lost. But that wasn’t happening either.

I waited and waited…I mean, what can a parent do? Stand aside and watch them hurtle towards the edge of the cliff, or say something and risk a relationship breach? And if you opt to say something, how hard do you push? This has been keeping me up at night.

Finally I couldn’t watch the train wreck any longer and called a family intervention meeting. Our schedules are impossible, so my hoped-for family meeting turned out to be me talking individually to everyone in an iterative fashion over several days. I talked to John. And then I talked to David (my ex, the kid’s dad). And I talked to Laura. And Laura talked to Alex. And I talked to Callan again. And Callan talked to Guen. And I talked to Mark. And I talked to Guen. And I talked again to David. And John again. And Laura again. And Callan about 5 more times.

I am happy to announce, we are all still talking to each other! Nobody hates anybody. And even better, this issue might have been resolved yesterday. Either that, or yesterday was just a brief, fleeting truce in a much longer ordeal. We will have to wait and see.

Meanwhile, on a completely different topic but almost as traumatizing, John and I have been having packrat issues. These awful little rodents are the scourge of the desert; more greatly feared by many of us than rattlesnakes, scorpions and gila monsters. They are larger than a house mouse, but smaller than a bonafide rat. They happily build nests under sprawling, prickly pear cactus or any sort of dense underbrush, but they prefer car engines.

First they caused $1,500 worth of damage chewing wires in my car. Then they tried to set up residence in our side yard amongst my gardening equipment. Then they tried to dig their way into the wall of our house!

This sounds impossible but our house is made of burnt adobe bricks, which are fired at a lower temperature than regular bricks, and are not a heck of a lot stronger than sandstone. They aren’t the dark red fired bricks those of you in the rest of the country are familiar with. I feel like I should be making a huff-and-puff-and-blow-your-house-down joke right now, but it’s not quite coming to me. Scritch and scratch and claw my house down?

John is a complete do-it-yourselfer, so instead of calling an exterminator, John handled the packrat problem himself, then patched the hole in the wall with cement, and then left for a week long business trip. A day or two into his trip, he emailed me with the bad news that he had some sort of food poisoning or stomach bug. Meanwhile he was stubbornly continuing to go to his meetings. This annoyed me, because in my opinion he works too hard and doesn’t take care of himself, but primarily I felt bad for him.

The following day, I had even worse news for him then he had for me. Something was dead in the office wall. As a long-time homeowner and landlord, there are few words that strike such terror. And I’ve encountered a lot over the years. Skunk spray. A broken water pipe under the cement slab. A lurking rattlesnake. A live mouse dropping from a hole in the ceiling onto the dining room table. A dead cat in the crawl space under the house. Sewer gas from an undetermined location. Ants, cockroaches, termites, all kinds of leaks and floods. I’m not easily fazed, but this one did me in.

It was the memory of the dead cat in the crawl space over 25 years ago, that made me immediately realize that for sure, no kidding, something died in our wall. Nothing else smells like that. When John got home from his business trip the next day, he was still quite sick, but he valiantly went to work tearing up the adobe brick wall to find the issue.

What followed was an ordeal that I don’t want to go into. I will spare you the details. It was not nice. It was really, really not nice. At all. It was a freaking multi-day nightmare that involved moving everything out of the office, twice. Not to mention me looking for a hotel to rent.

Meanwhile, while John was digging in our wall looking for something dead, we were counting down the 4 short days before my sister, her husband, and their 4 little girls were flying all the way from Boston for their annual spring vacation at our house! In four days! Our house was not liveable. How was I going to find a last-minute rental house big enough for 8 people and a dog? With a heated pool?

Their visit is a highlight of our year. I spend days preparing. I pack away all my breakable ceramics and glass art and white wool rugs. Then we head to our storage unit to retrieve car seats, blow up beds, strollers, and bins and bins of bedding and children’s toys and pool toys. And food! I bought food and made a gigantic basket of snacks for the kids. John bought food to grill for everyone. Emily sent huge shipments of food staples, diapers and other necessities from Costco and Amazon.

Four days until the biggest event of the year at our house, and there’s a dead rat in the wall! After working non-stop all weekend, John finally managed to find and remove the dead packrat. Whew! But oh, our problems are not over yet.

John continued to still be quite sick, but stubbornly went to work on Monday morning, despite his illness and our nightmarish hunt for the dead thing in the wall over the weekend. But by Wednesday, the day before my sister’s arrival, he was still sick and I started feeling a bit of a tickle in my chest. I wondered – who ever heard of a cold that started in the chest? My colds always start with a sore throat and runny nose. What starts in the chest? Unless – suddenly I realized – could it be covid?

I asked John to stop at the store on the way home to pick up a covid test. Sure enough, John had covid! And my family was due to get on the plane at 4 AM the next morning!

I frantically texted her, but you know Emily. She shrugged it off. She’s an emergency room doctor, and she is exposed to covid and lord knows what else, all the time. She wasn’t going to let a little covid exposure stop them. Plus, they were bringing the tail end of some cold virus of their own with them. We were going to have a happy little germ party!

And did we ever. John recovered fairly quickly and was soon splashing in the pool with the children. But I was sick for their whole visit. And the day after they left, I spiked a fever so high I couldn’t believe it. I fevered for 4 days.

I coughed so hard I would grip my head to try to keep my poor aching brains from slamming into my skull with each cough. I lost my sense of smell. My ears completely clogged up. Meanwhile I kept testing negative for covid. I tested 5 times over the course of 10 days. Whatever it was, it was very bad, but it wasn’t covid.

At the end of a week and a half, after my virus had presumably run its course, I still had huge amounts of pain and pressure in my ears, so my doctor put me on antibiotics. Optimistic that I would soon be better with the antibiotics, John and I left for our long-anticipated vacation in San Diego. My doctor told me I was not to fly for fear I’d burst an eardrum with the pressure changes. But we were driving, not flying, so I figured my ears could tolerate it.

We had an ok vacation, but I could not smell anything, couldn’t taste anything, could not stop coughing, and my ears hurt and my hearing was badly impaired. And I was chronically exhausted. My doctor sent a second type of antibiotics halfway through the trip and I still was not getting any better. But it was a great trip! I mean, it had the potential to have been a great trip. It met the criteria for a great trip, in that it consisted of all the things we like! Never mind that I didn’t actually feel well enough to enjoy it. It was still in theory a great trip.

In the next couple of posts, I’ll tell you all about Emily’s visit and our San Diego vacation. Stay tuned, it gets better. (Eventually)

Laura and Alex go to Italy

Laura says, “We had some tasty pizza for lunch. Alex was looking for a kebab place he spotted when we arrived last night, and I was like, kebabs for my first meal in Italy, seriously??”

Then she sent some very cool pictures:

It’s looking rainy! Sure enough:

She says, “A thunderstorm passed overhead, pretty briefly, while we were at the colosseum. When we walked back to the hotel, a tree had fallen across the sidewalk where we had walked earlier”

Uh wow, good thing they didn’t get hit by a tree on their first day in Italy!

Next we got some sunnier pictures:

She says, “Today we went to a chocolate museum & factory in Perugia. It did not live up to my Willy Wonka dreams, but it was still interesting and we got a bunch of chocolate. We also continue to learn new things about public transportation in Italy 😅”

She says, “Here’s all about how they make chocolate. In Italian. I thought John might find it interesting 😜” For those of you who don’t know, John is quite fond of chocolate. To put it mildly!

The next morning more pictures come in.

She says, “We are now in Peschiera del Garda (Peschiera of Lake Garda). In the first hour, I probably exclaimed “Freaking adorable!” at least 5 times”

A day or two later she says, “There is something here at the lake that stings/bites me, only on non-exposed skin (the heck?), feeling like a needle prick that then fades in ~5 min leaving me to wonder if I imagined it, only to return as an itchy bump two days later. There are also regular mosquitoes.”

Also on Tuesday she said, “Today we took a ferry on the lake and went to a spa with thermal hot springs water and saw this ridiculous gold car.”

Then yesterday she said, “We’re in Parma after a long day of traveling because trains were a mess. And I’m sick 😷 ugh. In good news, this Airbnb is a whole apartment and I can have my own room, so I don’t have to sleep with a mask on.”

I gather she is sick and Alex is not, and she’s trying to keep him from getting sick.

She said, “They don’t hardly mask anywhere, just like 10% of people are masking on trains and stuff. Alex and I have been pretty careful this whole time, but I managed to catch something anyway. Started with slight irritation in my lungs, which I thought was because of all the damn smokers here. But it was a persistent tickle yesterday. Woke up this morning with a larger area in my lungs irritated and a bit phlegmy which makes me cough occasionally, headache, and achy legs & back.”

She says, “Our apartment is the top floor, so there’s basically no space for windows.”

“But skylights in every room! This pigeon startled me when I was relaxing earlier 😅”

Then in the middle of last night (morning for her) she texted with worse news. She says, “I feel so much worse today. Fever, completely congested, and worst headache ever”, and then, “Confirmed, it is covid.”

We are so sorry to hear that Laura is confined to a room in Italy with covid, with pigeon butts for a view!

Off topic aside – I can’t help but notice that her attic apartment in Italy has the same type of ceiling as we have in Tucson, and the skylight is nicely and simply framed, unlike a set of old skylights in the Arizona room at my Tucson house. I will need to show this to my contractor.

Then this morning (mid-day for her), “I really like Parma and am disappointed that I’m missing it while I stay in my room all day. We tried to extend our stay, but this place is booked after us. So tomorrow we’ll go to Cinque Terre, where thankfully we also have two bedrooms.” And, “Thank god I haven’t lost my sense of taste! Lol”

I’m glad she still has her sense of taste – and sense of humor! But I am worried with her overseas with covid.

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com.

Kristina’s Life Coaching Website for Adults with Autism – ASD

Seattle Trip – Day 3 – Boise at last

By morning I had a sore throat. Was it from the air conditioning blowing a few inches from my face, or did I contract covid? We’re supposed to be visiting the kids today! We spent last night in Twin Falls, only two hours out of Boise, where Callan and Chirstina live. I’ve been really looking forward to hanging out with them. Was I going to have to quarantine instead? And does it count as quarantining if I stay “home” at our airbnb? Or do we need to turn around and drive home? Home being, I suppose, Albuquerque?

Have I recently been exposed to covid? The truth is, well, sort of probably. It seems like everyone has been getting exposed recently. My contractor’s son had symptoms last week, but hadn’t actually tested positive last time I heard. I didn’t interact with his son, just the contractor himself, who didn’t have any symptoms. It’s only a tenuous connection and right now, covid is so widespread that at any point any of us are likely interacting with someone who has recently interacted with someone with covid. 

Covid seems so common right now. I guess the only reason that it’s not a big deal on the news is because it’s mostly not deathly anymore? And everyone is bored with reading about it. Plus, I don’t think anyone has any idea how widespread it is anymore, because we’re all just testing at home and treating at home. I don’t know if anyone is reporting their positive tests.

So was I sick or not? We decided to hang out at the campsite for a bit this morning to see how I’m doing. We’re only two hours from Boise and can’t check into our airbnb until 2 pm. We had assumed we would hang out in Callan and Chirstina’s house, but not if I’m sick. Normally we’d be happy to hang around outside in a park, but today’s forecasted high is 105º. Pretty nuts for Boise. Our van’s portable air conditioner can’t keep up with temperatures that high.

Luckily we have covid test kits with us so we don’t even have to drive into town to look for one. That’s the advantage of being a heavy packer! True, it’s a nuisance to have to drag tons of potentially unnecessary luggage around, but when we want something, I’m likely to have packed it. Actually both John and I had packed test kits.

I opened a test and jammed that stick as far up into my sinuses as I could stand, and twirled for a count of 15, ugh, and…now we’re waiting 15 minutes…and drum roll…it is…negative! Whew! I know those home tests aren’t much good, but I’m feeling fine now too. My throat is fine. I guess I was just snoring last night and got all dried out! Lol.

Time to see the kids! We arrived in time for lunch. We told the Callan and Chirstina we’d bring take-out. John was in favor of just grabbing some breakfast burritos, but I had spotted a Russian restaurant that sounded interesting. Plus, I didn’t have covid so it was time to celebrate!

The restaurant was closed the next day, so today was our only chance. John and I tend to prefer to eat our main meal in the middle of the day and eat lightly in the evening. Russian food isn’t light, so I voted for Russian food for lunch. We got a number of items and it turned out to be fairly expensive, but we had been eating bread and cheese (and Greek fast-food) for two days. Plus, we planned to cook our own barbecue at Callan’s house for the next day, so we went ahead and splurged. It was yummy and the kids really appreciated it.

The Callan and Chirstina have a roommate (a good one this time) in the downstairs bedroom, and the guest room is set up as the kids’ office, and the guest bathroom has been taken over by their two new cats. So John and I stayed in an airbnb. It’s such an excellent airbnb! I want to stay here every time I come to Boise!

There’s a café right outside our front door, and the river is about 10 steps away. The greenbelt trail goes right by our windows, so we can watch the bicyclists, walkers, rollerbladers, strollers, dog walkers, and everyone passing by. 

Here’s the views out the windows:

And here’s the view from the front steps. This whole area is newly revitalized.

There’s no cars allowed down here at all – it’s all pedestrian and bikes. But there was a place to park the van on the backside of the building reserved just for us. It was a tight squeeze but we fit.

That’s the river right there.

The airbnb apartment is brand new inside. It’s rare to find a new, centrally located airbnb that allows dogs. I brought two large flat sheets to drape over the bed and the couch to keep Biska from shedding all over, because there’s no way I’m going to be able to keep that dog off the furniture. 

It’s a good thing we brought the sheets because, yep, puppy prints.

Biska unexpectedly walked right into the river on our first walk. I don’t know what she was expecting, but a deep river with a strong current obviously wasn’t it. She was more surprised than we were. Luckily John was able to hold onto her leash and get her back out.

Once she was wet, she was a dirt magnet. We tried to keep her out of the dirt but of course she got muddy. When we got back, John wiped her paws off with a towel at the front door, but it didn’t really do the trick. She got her feet the rest of the way clean on the bed, lol.

Here’s a picture of Biska right before she jumped into the river:

And after:

Yep, we’re going to have some muddy paws!

Here’s more pictures from our walk:

Saturday night with a live band along the riverfront!

We stopped to watch the paddlers in the water. Some were on boards and some were in kayaks.

Our airbnb was pretty in the evening light.

Our unit is on the ground floor on the corner. It’s very small, only a studio, but brand new and in such a fun location.

We could sit right on our front steps and watch everyone go by on the bike path.

Right at the water’s edge!

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com.

Masks slide away?

It’s been over 2 years now and most of us do not want to read about or talk about the pandemic anymore. But I thought, for posterity (because this is just going to seem so weird in a few years) I’d talk about when I am and am not wearing a mask. It’s the universal conundrum.

Masks are a weirdly important fashion statement of who we are and what we believe. And as is the fate of all fashion statements, may suddenly be sliding from the in-thing to the old-thing, like skinny jeans. It’s an ever-changing area of confusion in our lives, making the act of leaving our homes just that much more complicated. In a way it doesn’t matter, yet it is also a decision that must be made. There is no default. You are either choosing to wear a mask, or you are choosing not to wear a mask. I would do the neutral thing, but there is no neutral.

Yesterday an acquaintance of mine, an elderly women with cancer, was telling us about her discomfort over this past weekend when the person next to her on the airplane wasn’t masking. It mattered to her, so she asked him to please wear his mask. He refused, saying she wasn’t the flight attendant, so she flagged down a flight attendant who then told him to wear his mask. He angrily complied and they rode together in uncomfortable animosity for the rest of the flight.

Then last night they lifted the mask mandate on public transportation.

I’ve been trying to use logic and common sense when I determine when to wear my mask. But it’s a social construct, and social decisions cannot be determined by logic. Nonetheless, I try.

Here, for what it’s worth, are my recent mask decisions. I did not wear a mask when talking to a contractor in my home. I figured it was just one person. Neither did I wear one when a couple of friends came over. Plus, we mostly sat outside.

I also did not wear a mask when a friend and I went to an enormous tile store because the place was cavernous and nearly empty. I did not wear a mask when I dropped a package off at the UPS store because my package was pre-paid and I was in there for literally less than a minute.

However, I did wear a mask when I went to Trader Joe’s yesterday. Trader Joe’s is much smaller than the huge home decor warehouses and has many more people per square foot. I take a while, more than 15 minutes, to track down all the items on my list. Also, probably due to demographics, there is an unusually high rate of mask wearing in the specialty food stores like Trader Joe’s, Sprouts and Whole Foods. And I don’t want to be the asshole making everyone else uncomfortable.

I also note, when walking into a store, whether the employees are wearing masks. I have a high level of appreciation for anyone working with the public nowadays and I want to do my part to not make their jobs any worse. If they’re masking, they would probably appreciate it if I do too.

Except I forgot to wear my contact lenses and my mask was steaming up my glasses so badly that I could barely navigate the store. I found myself holding my breath as I hunted for each item on my list. Each second that I didn’t breathe gave me an extra second of sight before it all disappeared behind the fog.

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com

Reflections on risk perception

I haven’t written about the pandemic for awhile. I can imagine looking back on this blog some years from now and wondering, what? What is all this about roommates and puppy training and painting classes? Wasn’t there a world-crippling, deathly pandemic going on?

Uh-yep. But aside from a few selfies with masks on, what is there to say?

This is a personal news blog, for my friends and family. This pandemic isn’t personal news. It is global news – permeating all of our lives. That said, I’ve decided to post a well-written article by an emergency room doctor who started out in Boston and is now in New Mexico. Emergency room doctors have a unique, close-up perspective that the rest of us don’t have.

One of the things I found interesting in the article, was the doctor asking his covid patients – why didn’t you get vaccinated? The doctor said a lot of them just shrug. Of course they do. Because what could they say? “I didn’t realize.” Or, “They told me it was dangerous.” Or, “No one I knew was getting one.” Or, “My husband – my mother – my brother – my best friend – my pastor – my politician – the guy on the news – they said I didn’t need it.” And so they die.

I am reminded of when I ask myself, nowadays, why didn’t I get my colonoscopy done at age 50? I got it done at 53, and thus put my life in huge jeopardy. Why? I don’t know. I shrug. It just didn’t seem that important at the time. It seemed a little gross. Highly inconvenient. It was never on my to-do list.

It wasn’t until John was getting his done for the second time that I realized, huh, maybe I should do this. Now, if I survive this cancer – which it looks like maybe I will but we actually don’t know yet – if I do live, I have John thank for that. We do what the people around us do.

Of course the likelihood of dying of covid right now is so very, very much higher than the likelihood of getting colon cancer. Well, anyway, you all know that. Here’s the article:

https://www.newyorker.com/science/medical-dispatch/in-new-mexico-the-pandemic-rages-on

I’m also pasting the whole thing, for those of you who are allergic to clicking on links.

In New Mexico, the Pandemic Rages On

As unvaccinated patients overwhelm hospitals, health-care workers are being pushed to the edge.

By Clayton Dalton

December 9, 2021

An electronic billboard warns about increasing COVID19 cases as traffic passes.
An electronic billboard warns about increasing coronavirus infections in New Mexico, where community transmission remains high.Photograph by Susan Montoya Bryan / AP

At one of the hospitals where I work, in rural New Mexico, the covid-19 patients are often young. Many are extremely sick, and most are unvaccinated. Not long ago, I walked into a room to find a woman in her mid-thirties. (Patient details have been changed to protect privacy.) She was unvaccinated, and had tested positive the week before. Her oxygen saturation was just fifty per cent, and her chest X-ray looked terrible. She seemed resigned and scared. When I asked her why she hadn’t got the vaccine, she shrugged. Down the hall, I visited a man in his early twenties who was breathing forty times a minute. We were still waiting for his test results, but his chest X-ray also looked terrible. When I asked him why he hadn’t got immunized, he said, “I don’t know,” and shrugged, too. Outside, in the hall, I checked our status board. A ten-year-old had been checked in with worsening covid symptoms. Fifteen more patients were waiting to get tested. In New Mexico, it doesn’t feel like we’re experiencing a new “wave” of the pandemic—it’s more like we’re in the middle of an endless voyage, in twenty-foot seas, miles from land.

I’ve been working as an emergency-room physician all through the pandemicfirst in Boston and now here. Taking care of unvaccinated patients stirs up complicated emotions in me. Severe covid-19 is now a largely preventable illness, and I often feel anger and frustration: I think, You couldn’t be bothered to do something as simple as schedule two shots, and now you might die—what is wrong with you? I contemplate the risk that each unvaccinated person poses to everyone around, including to me, and my family, and our nurses, and their families, and the hospital staff who will clean the virus-slick rooms, and their families—the risks branch out with dizzying complexity, like ice crystals forming in a cloud. I try to keep these thoughts to myself, for obvious reasons. Who wants to hear, after they’ve totalled their car and broken their legs, that they shouldn’t have been speeding? Sometimes, when I stand at the bedsides of young, critically ill patients who shake their heads when I ask if they’ve got the vaccine, I murmur, almost to myself, “I really wish you had.” But their past choices are no longer the most important thing. They are sick and afraid, and need our help as much as anyone else. I tell them that we’ll do everything we can to keep them safe. I never tell them that, for some patients, everything won’t be enough. Read The New Yorker’s complete news coverage and analysis of the coronavirus pandemic.

By asking people why they have avoided these incredibly safe and effective shots, I’ve learned a lot about how confusing the information ecosystem has become. Patients used to tell me that they worried about adverse effects, such as myocarditis or blood clots. (These effects are vanishingly rare.) Then, in September, I started hearing about a new concern: “the vaers report.” I heard more about it by listening to a conservative talk radio show; listeners kept dialing in to talk about it. They said that tens of thousands of Americans had died after receiving the coronavirus vaccine, and that this report proved it. My patients in the E.R. began saying this, too.

As if on cue, I received an e-mail from a woman I didn’t know offering to send me information on the hidden dangers of the vaccines. She included a link—just, she wrote, a “snippet of what is going on.” I clicked through to a video featuring Jessica Rose, an independent researcher who studied computational biology at Bar-Ilan University, in Israel. In the video, Rose says that the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, or vaers, has shown an increase of more than a thousand per cent in reports of people saying that they were harmed by vaccines in the past year. In a separate twenty-three-page document posted online, she and a co-author claim that the vaers data suggest that as many as a hundred and fifty thousand people have died after getting immunized against covid.

vaers is real: it’s a public database, administered by the C.D.C. and the F.D.A., that allows anyone to submit a report about potential adverse events that they think might be connected to a vaccine. Early accounts of myocarditis associated with the mRNA vaccines came through vaers, and were later confirmed after closer investigation. By the end of September, vaers had received reports of 8,164 deaths after vaccination. That might seem like a lot, until you realize that more than two hundred and thirty million people in the United States have received at least one dose, and that about eight thousand deaths occur every day in the country—one every eleven seconds. Those two populations—the vaccinated and the dead—will inevitably overlap, but that doesn’t mean the vaccines caused the deaths.

Rose seems oblivious to this fact, and she and her co-author deploy a lot of charts and math to lend scientific embroidery to a baseless idea. They derive an “under-reporting multiplier” from a single unrelated study of anaphylaxis, and use it to inflate the number of reported deaths nearly twentyfold. Rose’s document underwent no peer review and was not published by any journal. As a work of science, it’s worthless. But, as an emotional screed disguised to look like a scientific paper, it’s very good. If you don’t have experience interpreting research, it seems like the real thing. It’s not hard to imagine someone on Facebook reading it and thinking, Holy shit.

One of the most striking graphs in the paper shows a huge spike in vaers reports soon after the covid vaccines were introduced. Rose interprets this as a signal of harm, but the political scientists Matt Motta and Dominik Stecula have a different take. “Because vaers claims are self-reported, they tell us something about what ordinary people, as opposed to doctors and medical researchers, think about vaccine safety,” they wrote, in August. “People may be more likely to report side effects, for example, in response to media stories about vaccine safety concerns.” They aren’t noticing harm from the vaccines—they’re looking for it. In this sense, Motta and Stecula argue, “The reporting system may be functioning similarly to a public opinion poll.” Now, in the E.R., I’m seeing the consequences of those opinions.

Not all of my coronavirus patients are unvaccinated. Breakthrough infections now account for twenty-three per cent of hospitalizations in New Mexico. Last month, I took care of a man in his sixties, vaccinated but suffering from covid, who had been sick for a week. His oxygen saturation was seventy-three per cent. I found out later that the patient in the neighboring room, who had come in the night before and been intubated with a severe breakthrough infection, was his sister. My breakthrough patients are almost always older, and have additional medical problems. They were among the first in line to receive their vaccines, and often look crestfallen when I tell them that they’ve got the virus anyway. Many have lost friends, siblings, even children. I can’t help but feel that, collectively, we’ve let them down.

Do these awful breakthrough cases mean that the vaccines aren’t working? Vaccine skeptics have cited rising numbers of breakthrough cases as evidence that the shots are ineffective. But the truth, as usual, is more complicated. As more people get vaccinated, the number of breakthrough cases will rise for reasons of simple arithmetic, in just the same way that a large country will have more cases of cancer each year than a small country: only a small proportion of vaccinated people will end up with severe breakthrough covid, but that translates to a fairly large number of actual patients as vaccination rates rise. And how widely the virus is circulating matters, too. Vaccines are like a city wall: they can repel invaders, but they’re not impervious. The size of the attacking force matters, and the longer the siege, the more likely that the city will fall. Community transmission remains high throughout the country, and, in New Mexico, because so many people—about four in ten—are still unvaccinated, every time a vaccinated and an unvaccinated person meet, it’s an opportunity for a breach to occur. The idea that we can partition people into two separate worlds, vaccinated and unvaccinated, is an illusion. We are all in this together, vaccinated or not.

I circled back to the man in his twenties. He was now on oxygen, and no longer breathing forty times a minute. I told him that his covid test had come back positive, and that his chest X-ray showed severe inflammation in his lungs.

“Oh,” he said, looking down at his blue hospital blanket. “Can I go home?”

“No,” I said. “I’m afraid not.”

I stepped out to start making phone calls. Before the coronavirus, our hospital sometimes transferred patients to other, larger hospitals for speciality services, such as cardiology or gastroenterology. Usually, that meant one or two phone calls. Now we transfer patients because we simply don’t have room, and arranging transfers takes ten, fifteen, twenty calls or more, because nobody else has room, either. It’s a rare victory when we can find an in-state bed for a patient, and I routinely fly patients five hundred miles to Nevada. A few days ago, one of my colleagues called thirty-eight hospitals across seven states. When he handed the patient over to me at shift change, she was on twelve hospital wait lists. “We considered Timbuktu,” he said, with what I imagined was a wry grin under his N95. The process is hell for families, who often look at us in disbelief when we tell them that we’ve found a bed in Nevada or northern Colorado or Texas. Sometimes patients die alone in these distant hospitals, and families struggle to get the bodies back.

When I say that all of the hospitals are full, they’re not full in the way you might think. As my colleague Dhruv Khullar has written, what determines a hospital’s capacity isn’t just physical space but personnel. Good care requires not just beds but also doctors, nurses, technicians, and support staff. Health-care workers are in short supply all over the country. An article in our local paper reported that four hundred and fifty hospital beds across the state were closed because of staffing shortages. We’re having the same problem at my hospital. We have empty beds upstairs, but we can’t find nurses to staff them. Some nights, we barely have enough nurses to staff the E.R.

A survey conducted in September estimates that eighteen per cent of health-care workers have quit their jobs during the pandemic, and that another twelve per cent have been laid off. Among those still working in health care, thirty per cent said that they were considering leaving their jobs. Another survey, of nearly ten thousand nurses, found that a quarter were planning to quit within six months, and a third were considering it. These departures propel a destructive feedback loop: as more nurses leave, the burden of patient care falls more heavily on those who remain, prompting more nurses to leave. The American Nurses Association estimates that there will be a deficit of 1.2 million nurses by next year.

A major cause of this exodus is said to be burnout. There is some disagreement over what burnout actually is; one of the first academic articles to address the phenomenon, published by a psychologist named Herbert Freudenberger in 1974, described fatigue, cynicism, irritation, and a quickness to anger. “The person looks, acts, and seems depressed,” Freudenberger wrote. But Christina Maslach, a professor of social psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, who studies burnout, maintains that it is not depression. In the nineteen-seventies and eighties, she led an effort to study burnout rigorously; she now defines it as a combination of exhaustion, depersonalization or cynicism, and diminished efficacy. As the field of burnout research expanded, subcategories proliferated: wear-out, brownout, frenetic burnout, underchallenged burnout. Compassion fatigue can result from exposure to traumatized individuals; moral distress and moral injury are newly ascendent concepts, occurring when workers are forced to act in ways that contravene their values or ideals.

I’m glad that researchers are trying to study what repeated exposure to traumatic experience does to us. The topic deserves illumination. But I don’t know that any of the categories I’ve read about fully captures what it’s been like to spend twenty months on the front lines of a pandemic, as social coherence breaks down around us, as unity devolves into acrimony, and as health-care workers receive threats of violence rather than overtures of appreciation. Freudenberger may actually have come closer to capturing the experience than anyone else. “If your idealism . . . has been lost, then the burn-out has also within it the dynamics of mourning,” he wrote. “Something has died. There has been a real loss.” A few days ago, I heard a nurse in another room talking. I don’t know whether she was speaking to a patient, to a colleague, or to herself. “We are witnesses to human suffering,” she said. “We are witnesses to human suffering.” I listened, thinking of the patients’ suffering, and of ours.

Not long ago, I sat down to take the Maslach Burnout Inventory, or M.B.I.—a questionnaire, developed by Maslach, that is now a standard part of academic research on burnout. I registered online, for twenty dollars, and spent about ten minutes answering twenty-two questions.

When I was done, the Web site gave me an assessment. “Your profile matches the Disengaged profile,” it told me. “A higher Depersonalization score can indicate reduced capacity to connect emotionally, socially, or cognitively with the job and the people in it, including colleagues and patients.” This struck me as fairly accurate. In the worst moments of the past twenty months, I have felt sensations of deep exhaustion, of heaviness and weight, of detachment, of numbness and isolation. At times, it’s been difficult to smile. On especially bleak days, burnout can mean you might struggle to care whether a patient makes it or not—an experience that would be mortifying if you didn’t feel so anesthetized. Of course, that’s not all of my experience. I still find joy, satisfaction, and meaning in my work—sometimes in moments directly following those when I feel most exhausted or despondent. Despite the terrible things I’ve seen, I’m grateful to be working as a physician. But I do wonder whether I can do it forever. I understand why people want to leave.

Sometimes I wonder whether we’re all burned out on the pandemic—not just health-care workers, but everyone. I picture my unvaccinated, critically ill patients who just shrug when I ask why they haven’t got the shots. I can’t think of a better gesture to capture what burnout feels like. The virus is still surging, and a new variant is here. My dying patients are younger than I am. How did past generations get through their own crises? Perhaps they had a better sense of common purpose, or a more unifying story.

The pandemic has divided and isolated us. But it’s also shown that we are all in this together, and always have been. The fight, for each of us, is to believe this, to feel it. The next time I’m standing at the bedside of someone young and critically ill, I’ll try not to say that I really wish they’d got their shots. I’ll say something else: you are not alone.


(End of article – credit Clayton Dalton)

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com

I’m here to visit!

This is me in Tucson:

https://xkcd.com/2454/

I’ve been here since November and have joined a variety of groups to get to know people. I feel like I know people here – but I’ve still not met them in person! I’m probably over-estimating the extent of our friendship because to me, they’re the only ones here I know! To them, I’m just a square on their screen.

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com

Second shot

We’re heading back to New Mexico for my second vaccination shot!

I just found a totally fascinating interactive covid mortality risk model:

https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/covid-pandemic-mortality-risk-estimator

In addition to the cool interactive model, I also appreciated that the authors of the article do a good job of explaining the data behind the model.

It’s a model, so of course you’re not supposed to use it to assess individual risk, but then again, that’s the whole fun of it. Here’s my profile:

John has been carefully protecting me, doing all the errands himself this whole past year. This had seemed reasonable because I have been battling cancer. But ironically, it turns out he was at higher risk than I was all along!

New Mexico is doing really well with their vaccine distribution. In addition to doing a very good job of prioritizing Indigenous and other vulnerable populations, New Mexico is also one of the overall highest in the country for vaccinations. New Mexico is the top state right now in percent population with at least one dose, and trails only Alaska in percent of population fully vaccinated.

(More detailed data at: https://www.wsj.com/articles/tracking-covid-19-vaccine-distribution-11611355360)

I really wish we could get John immunized, but at 53 and healthy, with a mostly work-from-home job, he doesn’t qualify yet.

The good news is, Monica now has her first shot! I had mentioned in a recent post that she’s 80 and still waiting. I guess Texas isn’t as organized as some of the states. But she was able to get in this week, whew!

Arizona appears to be vaccinating everyone over 55. I’m curious to know what percentage of people in Arizona are over 55? Seems like that would be almost everyone! Given that John and I are just shy of 55, I don’t think either one of us would be getting vaccinated in Tucson anytime soon.

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com

The Race is On (Florida Boating, Post 37)

Friday, February 26

On Thursday afternoon, we arrived at our chosen truck stop earlier than expected. We considered going on for another hour or two, but we didn’t want to spend the night on the road anywhere near El Paso. So instead, we stopped early and we spent the late afternoon relaxing in the enormous gravel parking lot.

It was a decision we later almost regretted, but at the time I enjoyed resting in the remaining bit of sun and talking with Serenity – we usually have a regular Thursday afternoon phone call. And Laura calls on Saturdays 🙂 I’ve got good kids.

Friday morning started abruptly when I checked my phone shortly after waking up. Our credit card company was inquiring about a suspicious purchase attempt at midnight. “Was this you? YES or NO?” $22 at some place I’d never heard of. Groggily, we tried to think.

If I typed “Yes”, a criminal could have access to our credit number. If I typed, “No”, they would immediately cancel our card. We use that card for everything. For too many things. For gas purchases, for online purchases, to pay utility bills, everything.

We had been ordering a lot of weird things for the boat, from vendors I had never heard of. Could it be one of them, finally putting a batch of charges through at an odd hour of night? Also we had been in the Florida Keys and in Houston, buying gas at places with crazy-sounding names. Could it have been one of those unfamiliar gas stations?

John googled the name of the vendor. They sell air guns? Tactical knives? Doesn’t sound like us. Perhaps it’s a place that would have boat parts? No. John said, no. Not us. I opened the text from our bank and typed, “No”. The card was instantly canceled.

Do we even have another credit card with us? If not, John thought we probably had enough cash with us for gas to get home, and we had plenty of food in the van. We dug through our luggage and John found a credit card associated with an old account we never use. He called to activate our never-before-used card, and we got on our way.

As John drove through unending West Texas, I got online to change the credit card number – everywhere. The phone company, the internet company, the storage unit; many, many places would attempt to automatically debit that card when bills came due, most within the next few days as the end of the month approached.

Suddenly, in midst of all that logging in and fielding verification codes pinging my phone, I got an unexpected ping. “Notice from DOH to Kristina: vaccine is now available at a location near you, sign-up is on a first-come, first-serve basis…”

They sent my code! I had a code! In order to get vaccinated in New Mexico, you have to sign up online and then wait and wait, and then eventually you get a code. Once you get a code you can schedule an appointment, but appointments fill fast. I had heard of people with codes trying for days and weeks to actually find an available appointment. I knew I had to act immediately. I got online and there were two appointments left, 1:00 and 1:30 at a Walgreens in Albuquerque. Nothing available the next day, or any day after that, just 1:00 or 1:30 today. That or nothing. I grabbed the 1:30 before it disappeared. But how would we ever get to Albuquerque in time? 

We were deep in West Texas, heading toward Tucson. We were at least 5 hours from Albuquerque. We would be over an hour late. Should we turn north at Las Cruces and drive several hours out of our way up to Albuquerque, not knowing whether they would take me so late? Would they have already given my shot away?

As we approached Las Cruces, our decision point, I gave them a call. At first, I selected the phone tree options for those with covid vaccination related questions. That call went nowhere – just some pre-recorded messages. I had to somehow reach the local Walgreens store and convince an employee at that store to talk to me. 

I tried again, this time answering the phone tree questions erroneously, as if I wasn’t calling about covid. I eventually reached someone at the store. I tried to turn on the charm (something I’m not very good at). I begged, cajoled and sweet-talked (also things I’m not very good at). She put me on hold. I got another person. I gave her my same desperate appeal. I’m in Las Cruces. I’m on my way, please wait for me, I’m coming.

She said I absolutely had to be there by the last appointment at 3:00. Our estimate of our arrival time ranged from 2:44 to 3:05. I begged her to give us to 3:05. We turned north toward Albuquerque – we were committed now.

Just past Las Cruces, google maps suddenly started trying to route us off the freeway. A slowdown? A blockage? Was it really bad enough to route us onto back roads? We’d never make it. 

Our success with google maps has been iffy at best this trip. Sometimes it routes us off the main roads into residential areas, presumably to save a few seconds. There had been no way to tell the app: we are towing a boat! Leave us on the main roads even if it takes 30 seconds longer!

The exit was coming up fast – just seconds ahead – we’d need to decide immediately. It was a long detour in an extremely rural area – once we made our decision there’d be no going back. We quickly debated. Do we go around the freeway blockage on country highways, or wait it out on the freeway? If we took the country highways, we would definitely arrive after 3:00. There’s no way we’d make it. In the last second we decided to ignore the reroute directions from the navigation app, and stay on the freeway and hope for the best. Sometimes freeway back-ups can clear quickly.

We sped on, hope diminishing. I could see the purple line on my phone map showing the freeway blockage up ahead. There was no other available route around the blockage. I remembered the two-hour delay we experienced a couple months ago on our way down to Tucson from Phoenix. The freeway had been completely closed the entire morning. Will it be that bad?

Suddenly I realized the backup was due to a border control check-point. That was excellent news. Border control back-ups come and go much more readily than major freeway accidents. Maybe we would make it after all!

Sure enough, we breezed through border control. They waved cheerfully and didn’t even want to peek into our heavily loaded van (white privilege, btw). Fingers crossed, we were going to make it.

We made it to Walgreens at 2:50, with a full ten minutes to spare. They were waiting for me. Although I’m not good at sweet-talking, I am very good at profuse thank-you’s. I was so grateful! Thank you, thank you, thank you!

I was the local celebrity, the one who drove all the way from Las Cruces to get my shot.

This concludes the series about our trip to Florida and back. I hope you enjoyed the story! We enjoyed our challenging and unique vacation. Soon we will all be able to go back to having normal vacations again.

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com

New Mexico’s vaccination plan – details

https://cv.nmhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/2021.1.8-DOH-Phase-Guidance.pdf

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com

“Visit Tucson This Spring!”

It’s the kid’s birthdays this month (half of my family has birthdays this month). I was talking with them over the weekend about what to do for their birthdays, and we were discussing planning a trip together. We decided it’s a good idea, but it’s a little early to plan specifics.

Then today Laura sent me this comic:

Happy Birthday everyone, and may we all have a better year – with some trips!

To send Kristina a comment, email turning51bykristina@gmail.com