Alberta man who survived COVID-19 after 39 days on a ventilator speaks out - Action News
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Alberta man who survived COVID-19 after 39 days on a ventilator speaks out

Paul Hemsing of Medicine Hat, Alta., is still recovering months after nearly dying of COVID-19, and is warning of the trauma the disease can inflict.

Medicine Hat man, still recovering months after nearly dying of COVID-19, warns of trauma from disease

A ventilator, hallucinations and goodbyes

3 years ago
Duration 5:27
COVID-19 ravaged Paul Hemsing's body and left him with deep physical and emotional scars. He hopes sharing his story saves someone else from having to go through the same thing.

Nearly 40 days on a ventilator. A tracheotomy. Forty-fivepounds lost. Countless hours of physiotherapy.

And now, post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, and flashbacks.

COVID-19 ravaged Paul Hemsing's body and left him with deep physical and emotional scars.

WATCH | Medicine Hat COVID patient pieces together 45-day ICU ordeal

"Frightening, exhausting, scary," he recalled, struggling to put words to his trauma."The fear of whether you were going to survive or not or whether you are going to see your loved ones again."

Hemsing who owns a hair salon in Medicine Hat, Alta., with his husband went to the gym threeor fourtimes a week and was otherwise healthy. The 51-year-oldscrambled to get his vaccination the first day his age group became eligible in April.

But COVID-19 found him anyway.

He contracted the virus inMay before he could get his second shot.Nine days after testing positive, Hemsing was rushed to hospitalwith dangerously low oxygen levels. He was quickly admitted to theintensive care unit (ICU) where hewasintubatedwithin hours.

"I was unresponsive," he said. "They said that I was in such severe shock that I would havepassed away."

Paul Hemsing says he missed milestones while he was hospitalized,including his son's high school graduation. (Supplied by Paul Hemsing)

That was the beginning of the nightmare. Hemsing was kept alive in a medically induced coma and on a ventilator for 39 days the longest any COVID-19 patient has been intubated at the Medicine Hat hospital.But even after coming off the ventilator, he wasn't out of the woods. His husband estimates he was in ICUfor about 45 days total.

The average ICU stay for a COVID-19 patient in Alberta is 10 to 12 days.

Hemsing spent a total of about 10 weeks in hospital. That includes a second admission for hospital-acquired pneumonia after he was initially sent home for three days in July.

'I could seeterror in her eyes'

At first,Hemsing had no memories of his time in intensive care.

Buthenow has dark flashbacks.

At one point, doctors woke himfrom the comaas they tried unsuccessfully to take him off the ventilator. His 22-year-old daughter was watching anxiously from behind a glass wall.

She recently showed him a photo she snapped at that moment inside the ICU.

Hemsing still has a scar from the tracheotomy doctors performed during his stay in the ICU. (Supplied by Paul Hemsing)

"Instantly, the memory of that came back to me," Hemsingsaid. "I remember her waving and smiling. And I could see that her smile was fake and I could see terror in her eyes."

He saw his husband, Michael,there, too.

"My daughter said, 'You just kept on mouthing over and over again: I love you, I love you, I love you.' Because I thought I was going to die."

Hemsing's long ICU stay was riddled with complications.Hewent into cardiac arrest twice and requiredresuscitation.It also took doctors several attempts to bring him out of his coma and take him off the ventilator.

"You panic. I tried to grab and pull the tube out of my throat," he recalled.

The ICU team performed a tracheotomy common practice for patients who have been on a ventilator for prolonged periods.The scar on his neck isa constant reminder.

Emerging fromfog of sedation

Once doctors were able to take Hemsing off the ventilator, it took about fivedays for himtoemerge from the fog of sedation.

"You experience very severe hallucinations. That was a really mentally scary time because you were foggy and groggy and you were seeing snakes and spiders. I was very panicked."

The hallucinations eventually waned and he became more aware of his surroundings.

"That was probably the scariest time becauseI couldn't use my arms or my legs. I had lost almost 50 pounds of muscle mass. My vision had changed. Everything was blurry," he said.

"I couldn't talk because I had a tracheotomy. I couldn't use my hands to write or ask for anything. So the only way I could communicate was yes or no with my head."

He was also experiencingintense pain from a large pressure wound he developed while in the coma.

"I had an eight-inch long, three-inch wide, two and a half inch deep pressure wound on my butt. Like a bed sore," he explained.

"I couldn't sit in a wheelchair I was in such agony, even with the pain meds."

Plastic surgeons operated three times to repair the wound, which became gangrenous at one point.

"It's actually only been twoweeks now since it has finally closed and left me with a forever, major scar going from the top of my waist to the bottom of my butt."

His recovery involved weeks of intense physiotherapy to build enough strength tostand, walk and regain the use of his arms.

Sleep was elusive becauseHemsing was afraid to close his eyes. "I remember thinking that if I fell asleep I might die."

He also missed life milestones while he was hospitalized,including his son's high school graduation.

'It's not like you go home and you're better'

Hemsing,who was nicknamed"Miracle" by the doctors and nursesbecause he wasn't expected to survive,has been home now for two months. But he is not the same.

At first, he said, "I couldn't do anything, couldn't hold anything, couldn'tcut a tomato or lettuce,couldn't prepare a meal, couldn't play the piano hardly at all. It was a lot of time in bed."

He also couldn't stop crying.

"It was very dark because your whole life changes. You lose your entire life."

Hemsing still struggles with PTSD brought on by the traumatic time in the ICU.He is also plagued by neuropathy,a condition causing numbness, pain and tinglingin his hands, feet and tongue. And he can only work for a few hours a day.

A photo Hemsing's daughter took of him while he was in hospital with COVID-19. (Supplied by Paul Hemsing)

"When you get sick with this, it's not like you go home and you're better," he said. "You go home and you heal for months and months and months."

Hemsing, who is now running for Medicine Hat city council, wants unvaccinated Albertansto know the terrifying details of his ordeal.

He wasn't yet eligible for his second shot when he became ill, but with the vaccine now widely available, he's urging people who haven't yet had their shotsto get them.

"I'm 100 per cent hopingI can help another one person even, that they won't have to go through this. And if you're fully immunized you won't have to go through what I did."