A trauma surgeon who operated in some of the world’s worst war zones has said that fighting on the front lines of the coronavirus crisis is an “intense experience” and is as bad as “seeing children blown up in Aleppo”.
Dr David Nott is a world-renowned trauma surgeon from Carmarthen, Wales. He has been a consultant surgeon at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital for 23 years.
In an interview with The Sunday Times, Dr Nott – who goes into war-torn zones to work for aid agencies on an annual basis – spoke about his experience working to save Covid-19 patients on ventilators at St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington.
He called the pandemic “the most frightening enemy” he has ever faced, and warned of NHS staff suffering post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) because the fight against the virus is “emotionally destroying”.
Nurses were “the real heroes” in his eyes, while he was just a “tiny, tiny cog in this most amazing machine”.
But the main problem, particularly among elderly patients, is that breathing becomes such an “effort” that they become too tired and “can’t breathe any more”.
The Welsh doctor, who runs the David Nott Foundation which trains doctors working in war and natural disaster zones, decided to keep his wife and two young daughters in a separate living space to minimise the risk of them becoming infected, as they would be “sitting ducks for anything I brought back”.
He said being away from his family felt like the Second World War, “with evacuees leaving their families”.
Dr Nott said he “never imagined” that doctors in the UK would have to make decisions about who to treat in hospitals here as he does in war zones, and knowing “which patients can live, which are futile to operate on”.
Dr Nott is hopeful the crisis will “reset minds so people realise the human race is one big family”.
“We’re only on this planet once, we’re all in it together and any of us can go down at any time,” he added.
The Independent
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