Boston Medical Center Doctors on Front Lines of COVID-19 Pandemic
Boston Medical Center
Five Stories from the Front Lines
For doctors at Boston Medical Center, who treat the city’s most vulnerable patients, every day is a sprint and a marathon as they race to save lives and work around the clock to contain the coronavirus pandemic
Since late February, once it became clear that Boston would not escape the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic, the city’s hospitals have been preparing for the greatest patient surge in their history. Planned surgeries were canceled, workflows redesigned, doctors reassigned, and special clinics erected.
At Boston Medical Center (BMC), the city’s safety net hospital serving the most underserved, vulnerable patient populations, and home to one of the country’s busiest emergency departments, doctors, nurses, physician assistants, and other staff are running both a sprint and a marathon. It is an all-hands-on-deck moment to help rescue a tidal wave of patients from a novel disease they know little about—and whose transmission can put their lives and their loved ones’ lives at risk.
In barely two months, in addition to admitting more than 180 patients with confirmed or possible cases of coronavirus, BMC has more than 100 employees who have tested positive for the disease. And the presumption is that it’s going to get worse before it gets better.
BU Today talked with five BMC physicians—who also hold faculty positions at the Boston University School of Medicine—about working on the front lines, their efforts, fears, and frustrations, as well as their reasons for hope.
Art Jahnke
began his career at the Real Paper, a Boston area alternative weekly. He has worked as a writer and editor at Boston Magazine, web editorial director at CXO Media, and executive editor in Marketing & Communications at Boston University, where his work was honored with many awards.
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There are 3 comments on Boston Medical Center Doctors on Front Lines of COVID-19 Pandemic
Salute to these guys and other employee who are holding fronts in their respective departments.Pandemic of this nature where solution is not medicine and these guys are holding guards.God bless these souls.
Thank you to all of these doctors and to all of the other essential workers who are risking their lives to keep us all healthy and safe. Good luck to the BMC workers in handling this pandemic.
As an ob/gyn locum provider it is scary how much we don’t know and have at hand to combat this virus. I hope all healthcare workers will take on this important role of spacial distancing along with ppe.
Keep healthy and take care of yourselves and eachother.
Comments & Discussion
Boston University moderates comments to facilitate an informed, substantive, civil conversation. Abusive, profane, self-promotional, misleading, incoherent or off-topic comments will be rejected. Moderators are staffed during regular business hours (EST) and can only accept comments written in English. Statistics or facts must include a citation or a link to the citation.