‘It Kind of Felt Like I Was Ending His Life’: Nurse Tells Heartbreaking Story of Facilitating Final FaceTime for Family of Dying Coronavirus Patient
- Ally Marcello, 24, works at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New York, where the coronavirus pandemic has taken the lives of more than 14,000 statewide.
- Early Wednesday morning, while most of America slept, Marcello helped a family say their final goodbye to their father over FaceTime.
- βWe love you and we forgive you for anything,β she described the family members saying to their father. βYou can go in peace.β
Nurse Ally Marcello works at the epicenter of New Yorkβs coronavirus outbreak. At 1 a.m. on Wednesday, she held up a FaceTime call to help a family say their final goodbye to their father.
Marcello, 24, has worked nights as a critical care nurse at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park for almost two years, she told the Daily Caller News Foundation. Her hospital began to notice the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic in the middle of March, and emergency room doctors told staff to brace for impact, she said.
βThings got bad pretty quickly,β said Marcello, who is also the founder of ISeeU Blankets, a project that provides home-made blankets to patients and family members in her ICU (intensive care unit). βThe surge in the hospital went way up and we started having to float to different units, and you started hearing medical rapid responses being called overhead, which is when they sent the rapid response team to people who are on the regular floors who arenβt doing well and might need critical care.β
The Situation at Long Island Jewish Medical Center
As of Monday, Long Island Jewish Medical Center had 790 patients: 592 of these patients had tested positive for coronavirus, and 115 of them were on ventilators, Marcello said. Only about 15% of those on ventilators will make it off, she added.
Marcello would typically work three days a week with an occasional fourth shift and focus on two very sick patients who need hourly checks and special medication every couple of minutes. But due to the pandemic, Marcello has been working five days a week and caring for four ventilated patients at a time.
βWe know what to do. We learned about it, but it just is so different,β she added. βI never thought I would be taking care of four ventilated patients at a time. I never thought I would be creating ICUs out of thin air on regular med surge floors that were not meant for critical care at all. And I never thought we would be staffing nine ICUs at a time. It just is crazy.β
Marcello and her fellow nurses are no strangers to sickness and death, but they arenβt used to the sheer amount of sick people that they must tend to every day. She expressed sadness that the pandemic limits the TLC (tender loving care) that nurses wish to show their patients. This wears on their emotions, she said.
βNurses get into that because they love people,β Marcello said. βThey want to talk to the families, they want to talk to the patients. And the fact that now that we donβt really have time to do so as much as we would like to, it can be taxing on a lot of people.β
The FaceTime Farewell
Earlier this week, Marcello cared for a patient who had recently been transferred to Long Island Jewish Medical Center β a patient she identified as A.S. to protect his privacy. The hospital has received many more patients since Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo deemed the hospital a βcoronavirus hotspot, meaning the hospital would receive more funding and more resources than other hospitals,β she said.
Marcello cannot recall exactly how long the patient was in the ICU, but she believes he was there for a couple of days. One of her fellow nurses had been caring for him, but the nurse could not be on duty that night and Marcello offered to care for him.
βItβs hard to manage these patients, first of all, because we donβt exactly know what weβre dealing with,β she said. βWe were fighting against the clock and trying to do what we could for him and it just, it wasnβt really working for him. And his blood pressure medication requirements started quickly increasing.β
As Long Island Jewish Medical Center focuses on the pandemic and scales back surgeries and pediatric cases, responsibilities at the hospital have shifted. Scrub nurses who usually only work in the operating room have been helping out as βFaceTime facilitators,β she said, allowing the nurses to give care to all the patients who need it without prohibiting the patients from talking to their families.
When one of these facilitators came through around 8 p.m., Marcello made sure she got on the call and let the family know the gravity of the situation β that things were not looking good for their father. She let the family know that he was requiring more blood pressure medication, that he was not breathing on his own, and that he was on βpretty significant ventilator settings to help open up his lungs.β
βThey understood that he was very sick, but I donβt think they understood exactly how quickly he would pass,β she said.
As the night progressed, A.S. became worse. Around 1 a.m., Marcello said she had maxed out on all the blood pressure medications to try to keep him alive long enough to FaceTime his family so they could say goodbye.
βWe did a multiple-person FaceTime call, so that way, all of his kids could be on at the same time,β she said. The family expressed their love for him and spoke to him in Spanish. She could understand some of it.
She continued: βAnd you know, they were just expressing their love for him and speaking to him in Spanish since thatβs mostly what he spoke.β
ββWe love you and we forgive you for anything,’β she described the family members saying to their father. ββYou can go in peace.’β
Their fatherβs heart stopped as they were still speaking to him, she said.
Marcello struggled for words, fearing she would offend the grieving family. She wanted to show them respect and sympathy. Usually it would be the doctor who would call and tell the family that their loved one had passed, she said, and this usually happened after the patient had passed. In this rare coronavirus situation, she said, the family was actually present virtually when their loved one passed.
She stayed by A.S.βs bedside and held the phone up for another 30 minutes so the family could see their fatherβs face.
βProbably the hardest part was finding the best time to kind of hang up so that way I could start the postmortem care,β she said. βWhen theyβre all crying and saying how much they love him, how do you choose when to say, βOkay, Iβm so sorry but we have to go now?β It kind of felt like I was ending his life in a way, even though he had already passed.β
After she hung up the phone, she broke down and cried.
Pride in Her Job
βThis post was not to make you feel sorry for me, but it was to express my pride,β Marcello wrote in an Instagram post the morning after her patientβs death. βI love my job how I get to fill in for them as family when thereβs canβt be present. I love that I am able to make the patient and his/her family comfortable in their last moments. I love to give my all to my patients but I pray this virus ends soon.β
Marcello is thankful she has had time to process the situation by talking to her coworkers, friends, family and her boyfriend Tim.
βIt was tough, but you know, you kind of have to bring yourself together,β she said. βI had a really big cry for 15 minutes and the other nurses picked up my other assignment, my other patient I was taking care of. So that way I can kind of let it out, collect myself. And then sadly, you kind of just have to go back to work. You could still be sad about it, but you gotta think about the other patient thatβs also in your care.β
As Marcello rests up before she heads back to fight the pandemic, she wants people to understand that even though the situation appears to be getting better, things are still bad in the hospital, especially for the ICU. She encourages everyone to listen to the government on when Americans can resume normal activities.
βPeople are still getting worse and you know, thereβs always the risk for a second wave to hit us when people start going out again,β she said. βYou know, people can be carriers and not have symptoms and not know it, and they could spread it when they start going out βcause the weatherβs getting better.β
Marcello is motivated to keep caring for the sick throughout the pandemic, even at the risk of her own safety, by both her patients and by her coworkers.
βI work with amazing, amazing people and you know, every time I go in we still somehow find a way to have a good time and keep each other happy and positive,β she said.
Marcello and her coworkers in the Long Island Jewish Medical Center SICU started a GoFundMe on March 25, βHelp LIJβs SICU Fight The Pandemic of COVID-19,β which has surpassed its goal of $2,000 by over $3,000.
βEveryoneβs been really supportive,β she said, describing how almost every shift she works, people donate snacks and food and send pictures and letters.
The nurses have a wall in the cafeteria that is covered in letters from students, she said, and her friends send her care packages in the mail. Someone played bagpipes outside Long Island Jewish Medical Center the other day, she added, and firefighters lined the walkway and clapped for the health care workers.
βWe do it for the patients and their families because we put ourselves in their shoes,β she said. βWe want the best care for our family members or for ourselves if we got sick. Itβs just little things, little acts of kindness and appreciation from the community. Itβs all those little things that kind of add up together and keep you going even when things seem very frustrating.β
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