Through the masked face, express empathy
Through the masked face, express empathy
Vijay Gopichandran
For many people Covid-19 and the lock-down have completely
changed their lives. For some of us, privileged lot, not much as changed. My 7-day
work week has not changed. I am not locked down inside my home and go out to
the hospital every day. For some of us, the not so ‘socially active’ lot, not
meeting people, not hanging out, not going out for lunches and dinners etc.
also do not matter much. But when I look at my work closely, I have realized
that so much has changed. The change has been so sudden, but the ambient
uncertainty and anxiety of the pandemic has made it imperceptible.
Yesterday, I saw the video of an innovative ‘no contact’ Covid-19
screening clinic. It is a model of screening patients with suspected Covid-19
while minimizing the contact between the patient and the doctor. The video goes
like this. The patient’s token number is called out in the public announcement
system. A well dressed, confident young man walks into the OP as soon as the
name is called. This man must be a staff of the hospital playing the role of
the patient for the sake of shooting the video. There are two transparent rectangular
booths facing each other. In one of the booths is seated a doctor clad in full
personal protective equipment. The public announcement system instructs the
young man to walk into the other booth and sit in front of the doctor. The
doctor and the patient are facing each other, in separate booths. The doctor
then switches on the microphone in front of her. I am assuming it is a ‘her’. She
calls out the name of the patient, “Mr. Ganesh” and says, “Please pick up the yellow
coloured gadget on the table to your right and wear it on your finger”. The young
man picks it up and wears it. She says, “Show me the gadget now”. When he points
his ‘gadget wearing finger’ towards her, she reads out the values displayed on
it and scribbles it down on her writing pad. She then says, “pick up the other black
coloured gadget on the table. Put it on your chest”. The young man does
that. She takes out her mobile phone,
switches on an application and wears her headphones. She can now hear the lung
sounds of the patient through the Bluetooth in her mobile phone. Then she puts
her hand through the double gloves that are protruding out from her side of the
booth into the patient’s side of the booth, instructs the young man that she is
going to take a swab from his nose and performs the procedure. She then says, “Mr.
Ganesh, now you may leave the room” and the young man leaves. Immediately after
than she switches on a button which sprays disinfectant all over the room in which
Mr. Ganesh was seated. The public announcement system calls the next token
number. I was really fascinated by the innovative use of technology to minimize
contact between the doctor and the patient. But the scene did not look like a
doctor-patient consultation to me. The warm greeting, the general enquiries
about his well-being, the meticulous process of taking a detailed history, the all-important
touch and ritual of physical examination and finally the detailed process of
explanation of treatment and follow-up were all conspicuously absent. I
wondered if this is the way medicine is going to be from now. I hope not.
Over the past month, that I have been working in the triage
department of my hospital which does the work of receiving all patients who
walk into the hospital, identifying those with Covid-19 symptoms, directing
them to the Covid-19 OP, directing patients with acute illnesses to the
emergency department ,treating a few patients right at the point of triage
itself, and sending back patients who have come for non-essential services, I have
seen the change in the way we practice medicine so clearly. One episode left a
very deep impact on me professionally as well as emotionally.
A young woman, in her mid-twenties walked towards the triage
area holding the hand of a little boy, about 4 years old. She was wearing the
shawl of her dress as a mask covering the lower half of her face. Her eyes and
forehead revealed a deep sense of worry. The little boy was holding on to his
mother’s hand like he was clutching at a lifeline. There was a blue coloured striped
handkerchief tied around the boy’s lower face as a mask. As soon as she came
and stood in front of me, the mother uttered, “Doctor, the child has fever for 4
days.” The reason for the panic in her eyes were clear. She must be scared that
this could be Covid-19.
The triage area is just outside the hospital, under a tree.
We are three to four doctors standing there at any point of time. We all wear
masks that cover half our faces. There is no way I can use a warm smile, a look
of concern, to calm the mother. I asked her, “Does the child have cough, or
cold?”
“No doctor. There is no cough or cold. But he is having a
high fever. I am giving him paracetamol syrup, but the fever is just not going
away”. Even through the face mask, I could clearly sense the anxiety and fear
that was embedded in her voice.
“Don’t worry. There is a separate OP for seeing patients
with fever. Please take the child to OP no. 10” I said and pointed the way to
the mother. She thanked me and walked slowly holding the boy’s hand.
After this, patients started coming in steadily and we got
immersed in our work. About an hour later, I desperately wanted a drink of
water, as the summer heat in the open area had reached a peak. So, I walked out
of the triage area to have water. I saw the young woman with the little boy
standing in the open, just outside the fever OP. I walked towards her and enquired,
“What happened? Have you seen the doctor?”
As though my question was her cue, she started crying. “The
doctor in the fever OP has asked us to go away. She refused to treat my child.
I came walking all the way from Porur (clearly more than 10 Kms), as there are
no vehicles or buses plying on the roads. I don’t know where else to go now and
what else to do”
I said, “There must be some mistake. Come with me, I will
take you to the OP.” and led the two of them into the OP no. 10. There were two
doctors, both my colleagues from another department, seated in the OP. They
were both wearing surgical masks and a plastic gown. There were no patients in
the OP. Both were sitting and talking something to one another. I made the lady
and her son sit on the patient’s stool and started explaining to the medical
officers, “Ma’am, I am the medical officer from the triage area. I sent this
child to you about an hour ago.”
One of the two medical officers, the senior one said, “Sorry,
we cannot see the child. We are not paediatricians. Ask the paediatrician to
come and see the child”.
In order to prevent the mixing up of patients with possible
Covid-19 with the non-Covid patients in the hospital, the hospital had drawn
out a policy to have a separate fever OP. The fever OP would be run by medical
officers from various departments. In order to minimize the number of medical
officers who will be seeing patients in the fever OP, all patients who had fever
had to be seen, irrespective of whether they are adults or children or pregnant
women in the same fever OP by the same medical officer. If the medical officer
had doubts and questions regarding management of the patient, they could call
the specialists on the phone and consult them.
The senior medical officer went on, “During this pandemic
period, I am made to sit in this fever OP exposing myself to infection, while
the paediatricians are relaxing in their department. This is not acceptable.
Ask them to come here. I will not see this child”.
I was completely aghast by her attitude. I pulled up a chair
and started seeing the child myself. The child’s history and physical
examination revealed a possibility of a urinary infection. I called the paediatrician
over the phone, discussed the details of the child with her and gave the treatment.
The clinical encounter was complete within 10 minutes. When I finished and got
up to leave, the senior medical officer in the fever OP looked at me and said, “I
could have done that too. But that is not the point. The point is that
paediatricians also must be held responsible. They must also come and work in
this environment. Why should I alone be exposed?”
I knew any reply I gave her would not be understood and
would only build up an argument. I wanted to tell her that there was no excuse
for sending away an anxious mother and a sick child without even seeing them,
but I did not. I wanted to tell her that even during emergency pandemic times,
the anxiety, worry and concern of a mother about her child’s sickness is the
same, if not more, but I did not. I wanted to tell her that medical
professionalism apart, what she did to that child and mother was bordering on
inhuman, but I did not. As I walked back to my triage area, I directed the
young woman and the little boy to the pharmacy to get their medicines. The
woman thanked me and walked away.
This episode showed me how much the practice of medicine has
changed in just 2 months. I do not know whether this doctor would have treated
the child and the mother in the same way even before Covid-19. Maybe she would
have, maybe not. But one thing that this pandemic has done is to make
self-preservation supersede compassion. A couple of months ago, we were not
averse to treating patients with tuberculosis. We were ok with dressing
infected, maggot infested, fowl smelling diabetic foot ulcers. We routinely
diagnosed and treated measles chickenpox, malaria, dengue and every fathomable
illness. But suddenly, things have changed to the extent that we are
insensitive to the anxiety of the mother of a sick child. It is particularly
important for all of us clinicians to know that the pandemic has not changed
the way people experience sickness, pain or discomfort. If anything, it has
only worsened it by adding layers of uncertainty and fear. Our role as
clinicians cannot change at this point. We are even more required now to be the
pillars of support for our patients. Through our masked faces, we must find a
way to express genuine concern and empathy. Through our glove clad hands, we
must find a way to touch and comfort. Through our meticulous attention to
details, we must show our patients that we are always there to care.
While previously doctors were just being self-centered and arrogant, thanks to COVID now doctors are called "heroes" for being so.
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