Doctors urged Minnesotans on Thursday to take COVID-19 seriously and to comply with new restrictions that take effect Friday night as they provided dramatic accounts of how the state's health care system — especially its health care workers — is at a breaking point.
Dr. Carolyn McClain, an emergency physician at Twin Cities hospitals, said the pandemic has been one of the hardest times of her life. She worked in Haiti after the catastrophic earthquake of 2010 but said that she could at least go home after that.
"This is my home, and I am watching people die," McClain told reporters at a briefing with Gov. Tim Walz and other doctors. "And that is hard. and it's been going on for a long time."
The Democratic governor a day earlier announced a four-week shutdown of many businesses and activities beginning Friday at 11:59 p.m., including inside dining at bars and restaurants and organized amateur sports. Prep sports seasons were cut short. In-person social gatherings with people outside one's own household, including Thanksgiving dinners and wedding receptions, are prohibited. Fitness clubs, entertainment and event venues must close.
One of the hardest thing for for health care workers to see, McClain said, is critically ill patients who are all alone because their family members can't go in to comfort them due to safety rules.
"And there's nothing harder than seeing people praying in the parking lot, when their family member is sick, and they can't be with them," McClain said. "And as a nurse or physician you take that home with them, because you feel like you have to love them a little bit more because they don't have their family with them."
McClain recalled seeing a patient about a week and a half ago. He was in his 90s, critically ill, and she had to tell him his COVID-19 test was positive.
"When you do that to someone in their 90s, they know what that means. So he said to me, 'Dr. McClain, I don't think I've been this scared since I fought in Korea,'" she said, going on to add, "He is now a statistic."