Skip to main content
Image
‘Code Blue’: A Brooklyn I.C.U. Fights for Each Life in a Coronavirus Surge

Photo by Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

HOSPITAL NEWS

‘Code Blue’: A Brooklyn I.C.U. Fights for Each Life in a Coronavirus Surge

By Sheri Fink, New York Times

Nearly every patient was on a ventilator. Some were in their 80s, some in their 30s. Medical workers were falling fast and had to be resourceful — “the alternative,” one said, “is death.”

The night had been particularly tough. Patient after patient had to be intubated and put on a ventilator to breathe. At one point, three “codes” — emergency interventions when someone is on the brink of death — occurred at once.

Dr. Joshua Rosenberg, a critical care doctor, arrived the next morning at the Brooklyn Hospital Center. Within hours, he was racing down the stairwell from the main intensive care unit on the sixth floor to a temporary one on the third, where he passed one of his favorite medical students.

“Shouldn’t you be home?” he asked, registering surprise. Clinical rotations for students had been halted to avoid exposing them to the coronavirus. “My mom’s here,” the student replied.

Dr. Rosenberg, 45, let out an expletive and asked which bed she was in. “I’m rounding there now,” he said and made sure the student had his cellphone number.

Read the complete story in The New York Times: ‘Code Blue’

Back to News