‘I urge you to get the flu shot’: Alberta mom whose daughter was intubated in ICU | 24CA News

Health
Published 06.12.2022
‘I urge you to get the flu shot’: Alberta mom whose daughter was intubated in ICU  | 24CA News

Paige Lloyd doesn’t usually get the influenza vaccine, however after spending two weeks within the Alberta Children’s Hospital along with her four-year-old daughter, she has a brand new perspective.

Andy began feeling sick originally of November. She appeared to get well, however  caught one thing else and was extraordinarily drained for per week. Then, on Nov. 19, she began having hassle respiration.

“I could tell she was breathing really hard… shallow and quick,” Lloyd mentioned. “We took her in (to Cochrane urgent care) and immediately she was brought right in and put on oxygen.”


Andy, 4, at Cochrane pressing care, Nov. 19, 2022.


Paige Lloyd

After a name to ACH, a transport group got here, assessed Andy, put her on high-flow oxygen and rushed her to the hospital in Calgary, the place she was admitted to the intensive care unit.

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“Within about an hour, she was intubated there,” Lloyd recalled.

“They basically had to sedate her to a point where she wouldn’t fight the tube going in. I stepped out… I was bawling. We go back into the room and she looks almost lifeless… It was terrifying.”

Read extra:

‘We were rushed into trauma’: A glance inside Canada’s RSV and flu disaster

Andy examined optimistic for each Influenza A and a secondary an infection of pneumonia. She was intubated for six days earlier than the tube was eliminated. However, she was fighting a lot congestion, she needed to be intubated a second time.

“At that point, I broke,” Lloyd mentioned. “It was so sad, as a mom, to be so helpless that you can’t do anything.

“Emotionally, mentally, I was so done.”


Andy, 4, was admitted to Alberta Children’s Hospital ICU on Nov. 19, 2022 with influenza A and pneumonia.


Paige Lloyd

The ICU was so busy, Lloyd mentioned it was like a revolving door of sick kids. Despite the amount, stress and pressure, she mentioned the workers had been unbelievable.

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“As soon as one child was getting discharged up to one of the wards, they were right in there, cleaning it, sanitizing it, getting another bed ready and another child was being admitted. The doctors, the nurses, they’re handling it so well. It takes such a special type of person to take care of these sick kids and even with the staffing issues they have, they never stop smiling. It was so amazing to see.”


Click to play video: '‘I was just standing there shellshocked’: Alberta mom recounts daughter’s week in ICU'


‘I was just standing there shellshocked’: Alberta mother recounts daughter’s week in ICU


Andy was discharged on Dec. 1 and on Tuesday, Lloyd mentioned her daughter is sort of again to her regular self however “very skinny from being on a feeding tube for two weeks.”

The entire expertise has Lloyd asking herself some questions.

“I’ve never had the flu shot before,” she mentioned. “I used to be all the time a giant believer that: it’s the flu shot, it doesn’t cowl all of the flus on the market. But truly, it covers the actually dangerous ones.

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“I’ve been second-guessing myself since this whole thing started… If we had the flu shot, would she have gotten so bad? Would she have been able to fight it a little better?

“I know a lot of people hearing these stories are just like myself and they’ve all gone out to get the flu shot,” Lloyd mentioned.

“If you don’t have to go through what we endured for two weeks, watching your child need these life-saving machines, I urge you to go get the flu shot.”

Read extra:

AHS redeploying workers to Alberta Children’s Hospital as respiratory viruses spike

Like many kids’s hospitals throughout Canada, Alberta’s two kids’s hospitals are seeing a surge in pediatric sufferers as they take care of an increase in respiratory diseases.

Health officers have mentioned the Calgary hospital and the Stollery Children’s Hospital in Edmonton have been working at or above 100 per cent of their regular capability for the previous month.

A surge in sufferers at ACH prompted Alberta Health Services to redeploy workers there from Rotary Flames House, a facility that gives respite look after chronically and terminally ailing kids.

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So far, comparable redeployment measures haven’t been applied on the Stollery, an AHS spokesperson mentioned Tuesday. However, a unit that was quickly used for adults has been reverted again to pediatric care, opening as much as 13 extra beds within the “coming weeks.” Some Stollery physicians are working additional shifts, AHS mentioned. The pediatric ICU is at about 100 per cent capability however has the flexibility so as to add extra beds if required.


Click to play video: 'Temporary space added to Alberta Children’s Hospital to support over capacity ER'


Temporary house added to Alberta Children’s Hospital to help over capability ER


In an replace Monday, ACH’s senior working officer mentioned the hospital has added six extra beds and 65 redeployed workers — and that’s on prime of different expanded capability efforts. Six extra beds are being added on Wednesday.

“The 65 people are coming from the Rotary Flames House, as well as some outpatient clinics,” Margaret Fullerton mentioned. “We also have staff from other areas of AHS that are coming from more corporate types of positions that worked at the children’s hospital in the past and they’re coming forward.”

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Prevention — and decreasing the strain on hospitals — is essential, Fullterton mentioned.

“We have very low vaccination rates for influenza, especially for children right now in Alberta, and the more flu vaccines we can get into children and families, I think would really help.”

Fullerton mentioned the hospital can take extra steps to satisfy extra affected person demand, if wanted, however she actually hopes it doesn’t come to that.

“We want to make sure we are ready in case the respiratory surge continues. We do look to eastern Canada and we know they’re continuing to face that surge. We are hopeful that the influenza rates, the RSV rates, will drop but we have to be prepared in case that doesn’t happen.”

ACH is anticipating to should cancel seven surgical procedures this week, however continues to be scheduled to finish 160.

Fullerton mentioned of the hospital’s 82 clinics, 5 have been impacted and a few sufferers are being postponed.

“It’s about a 30- to 50-per cent reduction in those services in those five clinics,” she mentioned. “Those five clinics are related to gastrointestinal, nephrology, orthopedics, our surgery clinic and our pulmonary function lab.”


Click to play video: 'Minister Copping says as a parent, he knows it’s been hard finding children’s medication'


Minister Copping says as a mum or dad, he is aware of it’s been arduous discovering kids’s medicine


When requested concerning the province’s plans to scale back strain on kids’s hospitals, each the premier and well being minister talked about bettering well being capability and effectivity — however didn’t encourage vaccination.

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“We’ve been hit with RSV, COVID and influenza all at once,” Danielle Smith mentioned Tuesday morning. “Sadly, there isn’t a vaccine for RSV and it’s the most common childhood illness.

“What people need to know is that when their child gets sick, that they have the medication available to them so that they can treat the symptoms at home.”

Read extra:

5M bottles of youngsters’s medicine en path to Alberta in coming weeks

The Alberta authorities introduced Tuesday that Alberta Health Services has secured a cargo of 5 million bottles of youngsters’s acetaminophen and ibuprofen. Smith mentioned the province is working with AHS and Health Canada surrounding the logistics in the case of importing the medication. It’s one thing Health Minister Jason Copping mentioned ought to take about two to 3 weeks.

Fullerton mentioned the surge in circumstances that ACH is seeing is “primarily flu and RSV, and some COVID.”

Alberta’s newest influenza statistics (finish of Nov. 26 week) present 5,163 lab-confirmed circumstances of influenza, practically all of that are Influenza A. The knowledge reveals 818 hospitalizations because of flu, together with 80 ICU admissions. Twenty-four of these ICU sufferers are beneath 18 years previous.

Sixteen deaths have been attributed to the flu to this point this season, together with two kids.

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The Alberta Health knowledge reveals simply 22.5 per cent of Albertans have obtained a flu shot.

Copping mentioned Tuesday there are some hopeful indicators.

“Looking at the data right now — flu wastewater data — it appears we have peaked. So that’s coming down.

“And when we actually look at the absenteeism numbers in schools — both in Calgary and Edmonton — three weeks ago, in Edmonton, it was about 15 per cent, in Calgary two weeks ago. It has now dropped to five and seven per cent, respectively,” Copping mentioned.

“It looks like the number of transmissions in the community is coming down. It takes a little time for that to show up in the hospitals, but we expect the pressure on the hospitals will come down.”

Read extra:

Alberta’s well being minister says assistance is coming for youngsters’s hospitals

Dr. Katharine Smart, pediatrician and previous president of the Canadian Medical Association, says it’s too early to say we’ve peaked.

“We’ve seen a really vertical rise of influenza. There’s some indications RSV could also be levelling off. But I believe we now have to recollect we’re at very excessive charges. It’s not one thing that’s going to go straight up after which go straight down. We often see these viruses over a number of months as soon as they’re locally.

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“I certainly don’t think that there’s significant relief in the near term,” she mentioned.

“We really need to be thinking about what we can do to mitigate the impacts of these viruses right now and ensure children are able to access the medical care they need.”

The cornerstone of that mitigation?

“Being vaccinated is critical. We have an excellent flu vaccine this year; it’s well-matched to the circulating strains of influenza. So for people who aren’t vaccinated, getting vaccinated is really important. Parents need to know that children as young as six months old can be vaccinated for the flu. COVID vaccines are also available for children and boosters for adults. And then masking in indoor spaces can really help blunt the spread of these respiratory viruses and allow our hospitals to catch up.”


Click to play video: '‘Children are dying’: Family that relied on respite care speaks out about fallout from surge in respiratory infections'


‘Children are dying’: Family that relied on respite care speaks out about fallout from surge in respiratory infections


Smart mentioned the flu vaccine uptake is low — sitting between 20 and 25 per cent of the inhabitants, relying on the place you look in Canada.

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“When you’re vaccinated for the flu, your chance of getting severe illness is much lower — that means things like pneumonia, secondary bacterial infections, needing hospital admissions. And just if you do end up contracting the flu, your whole course of illness is going to be much milder.”

An earlier-than-usual influenza season and vaccine fatigue are making issues more difficult, Smart added.

“And I think, unfortunately, a lot of misinformation that spread around the COVID vaccine has led to some vaccine hesitancy or uncertainty in the population. But these vaccines are safe and effective. And children under five are very vulnerable to complications from the flu and getting severe disease.

“So choosing vaccination is much better than choosing getting those complications from what is a vaccine-preventable illness.”

She mentioned the spike in pediatric respiratory sickness is additional straining an already-struggling well being system.

“I think the crisis is really significant. I think it would be helpful right now for people to see their leaders acknowledging it.”


Click to play video: '‘Tridemic’ causing new health-care impacts across Canada'


‘Tridemic’ inflicting new health-care impacts throughout Canada


The president of the Alberta Medical Association’s pediatrics part agrees that preventative measures will help cut back the strain on hospitals.

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“The first thing: if you’re sick, you’ve got symptoms, don’t go out,” Dr. Sam Wong mentioned. “If you’ve got a cold, a cough, don’t go out. If you have to go out, wear a mask so you’re not transmitting your virus. Masks work. If you’re wearing a mask, you’re reducing the risk of somebody else catching a virus.”

Read extra:

Will COVID vaccine fatigue result in low flu shot uptake? Why some specialists are involved

He additionally hopes extra Albertans might be immunized in opposition to the flu.

Both RSV and influenza hits kids the hardest when they’re younge

“The idea of getting vaccinated seems to make so much sense to me in helping to reduce the workload that the hospitals will undergo,” Wong mentioned.

“It’s disillusioning sometimes when I look at the numbers to see how few people have gotten their kids vaccinated or have themselves have gotten vaccinated. It’s just sad.”