Shocker nurse stands on frontlines of the East Coast COVID-19 crisis

When 蹤獲扦alumna Krista Giggy leans over a COVID-19 patient to insert an intubation tube, she believes destiny led her there.

Its been a fortuitous track that brought me here, but I have no regrets, said Krista, a certified registered nurse anesthetist at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, N.H.

As with most health care workers, there have been dramatic changes in Giggys professional world.

Im a nurse anesthetist, and I typically work in the operating room, she said. But I joined the airway team at my hospital. Its an all-volunteer emergency team for when a patient needs a breathing tube or to be resuscitated.

Giggy, a 2004 蹤獲扦graduate, is one of a few professionals on the team who go into the room to insert a breathing tube, IV lines or monitoring lines.

The idea is to have as few staff in the room as possible getting exposed. When theres a high-exposure procedure like inserting a tube, theres an increased risk of exposure, Giggly said.

Dartmouth-Hitchcock currently averages about eight to 12 COVID-19 patients at a time some in the intensive care unit and some in standard care rooms, she said. The hospital has a dedicated unit solely for COVID-19 patients or those suspected of being infected by the virus.

It hasnt been quite as bad as anticipated, but its expected to get worse before it gets better.

Depending on the procedure, Dartmouth-Hitchcock has implemented policies and procedures to protect its staff, including personal protective equipment.

We have N95 masks to wear in the OR for any staff thats within 6 feet of a patient, Giggy said.

The staff also wears reusable respirator masks with rubber filters on the side, as well as powered-air purifying respirators, which have purified air running through a HEPA filter and a clear mask to cover the health care providers face from splatter.

Its not quite a Hazmat suit, but its as close as you can get, she said.

Giggys path to Dartmouth started when she was a student at 蹤獲扦 in the early 2000s.

It really didnt occur to me to be a nurse initially, but now I cant imagine doing anything else.

In 2004, she graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.


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