‘We were rushed into trauma’: A look inside Canada’s RSV and flu crisis | 24CA News
Amanda Weger continues to be a bit shocked that what started with a gentle fever and a cough for her 23-month-old daughter has now turn into a two-week-long keep on the Alberta Children’s hospital, together with per week in intensive care.
“A trauma team rushed in, they were hooking her up to all the monitors and I was just standing there shell-shocked. I didn’t realize she was as sick as she was,” stated Weger.
Avery Harper is likely one of the many youngsters battling RSV and the flu in Canada proper now. The viral diseases are hitting younger sufferers so arduous that youngsters’s hospitals throughout the nation have been overwhelmed.
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“In general, we’re seeing more children requiring oxygen and other supportive therapies at this time than we did with the COVID surge in the spring. But even then, our emergency department volumes were nowhere near where they are now,” stated Dr. Stephen Freedman, an emergency division doctor on the Alberta Children’s Hospital. “That’s because of the timing of these viruses, it’s all happening at the same time.”
At the time Avery was admitted to ICU, her mom says there have been 15 different sufferers within the unit, all with RSV, the flu or each viruses on the similar time.
“It was scary; there were paramedics dropping kids off, literally as one stretcher was taken away, another replaced its spot within minutes,” stated Weger.

During Avery’s time in intensive care and with permission from her household, the little lady was photographed by Dr. Heather Patterson.
The emergency doctor and photographer has been documenting employees and affected person experiences in hospitals because the starting of the COVID pandemic for a mission meant to assist encourage front-line staff to hold on via difficult instances.
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“Health-care workers all across the country that work in child health are running as fast as they can and they’re dedicated and resilient people but they are also very tired,” stated Dr. Laura Sauve, a pediatric infectious illness specialist and the chair of the Canadian Pediatric Society’s Pediatric Infectious Diseases and Immunization Committee.
“Hospitals are having to be creative in making sure that we can provide high levels of care even when we are stretched really very thin.”

For two weeks, Amanda Weger and her daughter have seen this firsthand.
“Our health-care system is on life support right now, I do feel it’s worse than when COVID first hit,” she stated. “My heart breaks for these health-care workers. They’re so busy.”
Avery continues to get well in hospital, although she is now not in intensive care. Her mom hopes they may be capable to go house throughout the subsequent week.
23-month-old Avery Harper on the Alberta Children’s Hospital. December 2022.
Amanda Weger
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