The U.S. Surgeon General credits the new surge in COVID cases to “pandemic fatigue,” but it’s nothing compared to what healthcare workers on the frontlines are going through. TIME recently reported that nurses are experiencing burnout, but it often goes unseen. A nurse recently employed a social media trend to draw attention to the behind the scenes fatigue.
An ICU nurse posted her own “how it started/how it’s going” photo on Twitter, and long story short, it’s not going that great. The before photo of Kathryn, an ICU nurse in Nashville, was taken in the middle of April right after she completed nursing school. The after photo revealed just how much literal sweat and tears healthcare workers put in while treating people during the pandemic.
How it started How it’s going https://t.co/cg32Tu7v0B— kathedrals🇺🇸 (@kathedrals🇺🇸)1606076608.0
Some people refuse to wear masks for even 10 minutes in the grocery store because it’s “not comfortable,” but it’s nothing compared to the safety measures Kathryn and other nurses have take on a daily basis. Kathryn’s photo displayed a sweaty face and facial marks from her PPE. “I mean just the physical effects of wearing all that PPE (personal protective equipment) for so long,” she told CTVNews. “We’re dehydrated all the time because we’re sweating so much and because with the masks on, you can’t drink until you leave the floor or go into the break room to take your mask off and drink.”
I love being a nurse. Didn’t exactly expect to be a new nurse in the middle of a highly politicized pandemic but li… https://t.co/2wuPiLbVcL— kathedrals🇺🇸 (@kathedrals🇺🇸)1606133400.0
Covid is a brutal disease and I wouldn’t wish the worst of it on my worst enemy. Please understand that you aren’t… https://t.co/O7rOtPOWrI— kathedrals🇺🇸 (@kathedrals🇺🇸)1606133401.0
Kathryn posted the photo because she wanted to draw attention to what nurses deal with on a daily basis. “It’s exhausting,” Kathryn told CTVNews. “People don’t see it. They don’t. They don’t see what we see. They don’t see the reality of this every day.”
Ultimately, Katherine wants people to take the pandemic seriously. “There’s still no definitive treatment for this disease and so to see my patients, these people that I provide care for, suffer so intensely and then see other people acting like that’s not happening, or like they couldn’t cause that to happen to someone else, is infuriating,” she told CTVNews.
Katherine stressed that the best way to ease the burden on tired nurses is to take care of yourself. “There isn’t any cavalry coming to relieve us or take our place if we fall, and things are only going to get worse,” she told Scary Mommy. “We will do everything we can for as long as we can to help as many as we can, but the public has to do their part to limit the spread of covid or the healthcare system and the people who work in healthcare will collapse under the weight of it.”
The nurse received a lot of positive support on Twitter.
@kathryniveyy Hang in there. As a pediatrician I never anticipated having to wear N95s routinely. I know you have t… https://t.co/Z3pripCYhw— Mark Patterson, MD, PhD (@Mark Patterson, MD, PhD)1606079172.0
@kathryniveyy It’s the thousand yard stare in the PPE pic that seals it. We are in this together. Stay strong my fr… https://t.co/C7gdVjYmKn— Absurd Nurse (@Absurd Nurse)1606082353.0
Katherine also encouraged other nurses to share photos of their haggard looks and mask marks. “Healthcare workers, drop your covid unit pictures and stories in this thread. People need to see the reality of what this disease does and we may not be able to film inside the hospitals, but we can show people what it’s done to us. They have to see,” she Tweeted.
@kathryniveyy How it started➡️how it’s going https://t.co/d7kc0nbqZE— Absurd Nurse (@Absurd Nurse)1606210231.0
@kathryniveyy https://t.co/6NpY7KKtn6— Christina Baker (@Christina Baker)1606185334.0
@kathryniveyy This picture is from May 1, the first shift I’d had since late March in which I got a break long enou… https://t.co/LaV6JcAInW— Kat Bridges (@Kat Bridges)1606187884.0
@liiindzayloo @kathryniveyy @TreasureeIsland How it started vs how it’s going 🙃 https://t.co/dMpeh4qsjV— LYSS⚡️ (@LYSS⚡️)1606193158.0
How it started how it’s going
#COVID19 https://t.co/FIpc7INl69— muh kae luh 🔫 (@muh kae luh 🔫)1606129993.0
Staying at home, wearing a mask out in public, and washing your hands frequently is a walk in the park compared to what nurses are going through. And honestly, it’s the least you could do support healthcare workers.