'I am terrified': Winnipeg doctor with COVID-19 calls for backup in fight against pandemic - Action News
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Manitoba

'I am terrified': Winnipeg doctor with COVID-19 calls for backup in fight against pandemic

Owen Mooney is a fit, front-line doctor who had been fighting the coronavirus in Winnipeg hospital wards with patients with COVID-19, but never expected that the virus would knock him out cold.

Dr. Owen Mooney, who tested positive Sunday, wants stronger public health response, people to stay home

Dr. Owen Mooney, who was battling COVID-19 in what became like a 'MASH field hospital' at St. Boniface, is now isolating from his family as he fights the virus himself at home. He urges people to take the pandemic seriously, as well as its potential to completely overwhelm our health-care system. (Erin Brohman/CBC)

Owen Mooney is a healthy, fit, front-line doctor who had been fighting the coronavirus in Winnipeg hospital wards, but never expected that the virus would knock him out cold.

The44-year-old internal medicine specialist has been on call 24/7 for the past week, treating and admitting wave after wave of patients with COVID-19 at St. Boniface Hospital.

In that time, seven or eight of his own patients died from the virus.

It was the most"heartbreaking and difficult and emotional week I've ever worked," he said."Not only numbers but patients and families being isolated and dying alone. Which is not the way things should be."

Mooneywas achy and fatigued from the "harrowing" week on Saturday, which is not uncommon, he said, but he got tested Sunday when the soreness and symptoms rapidly worsened. His results came back positive that evening, and he said it's the sickest he's ever been in his life.

Now that he hasCOVID-19, the avid runner is so weak he can barely sit up. He's isolated away from his family in his basement, while they wait on their test results.

"I've seen the effects of COVIDand how quickly it can affect those vulnerable. Now that I'm experiencing it I can see it's a lethal disease for those who don't have much of a reserve. It's terrifying," Mooneysaid.

"Sitting up takes effort. Productive cough. Muscle aches. Sore throat. My taste and smell are gone. And this happened within a period of sixto eight hours."

WATCH| Dr. Owen Mooney talks about his COVID ordeal:

A Winnipeg doctor's message about what you can do to fight the pandemic

4 years ago
Duration 2:33
Dr. Owen Mooney fought COVID-19 in Winnipeg hospital wards and is now fighting it himself. He wants to see stricter measures to control the virus overwhelming Manitoba's system.

'Difficult to deal with the numbers'

Mooney can't remember a breach in his use of PPE. He and a physicianassistant had been managing the care of more than 40 patients with COVID-19including admittingpatients from the outbreak at the Victoria General Hospital and managing the flow of patients coming from within St. Boniface itself.

"It is somewhat like a MASH field hospital. It is relatively chaotic. The numbers have obviously been escalating exponentially and it's difficult to deal with the numbers," he said.

"You have a health-care staff that are unfamiliar with dealing with how sick these patients come in at."

The unique environment, virus and attention to donning and doffing PPE is "mentally exhausting," he said,

Mooney is one of more than 350 physicians who have signed a letter to the premier, urging him to support a stronger public health response and put emergency funding towardmore contact tracing, testing, staff and support for vulnerable and low income patients.

"I think you've had an amazing ground roll of support of physicians supporting escalating measures to stop the spread of this virus. The only time to act is now. We don't have more time," he said.

"The system is on the brink of collapse.... We're truly at a tipping point and may actually be well past it, to be honest with you. And I really worry about the next upcoming weeks."

Dr. Owen Mooney had been caring for COVID-19 patients at St. Boniface Hospital, seen here in an Oct. 27 photo, when he caught the virus himself. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

'Really, literally hit home'

It's been hard battling COVID-19 at home too.

"I've never seen him this sick. He's a strong tough guy. He doesn't go down like this for anything,"said his wife, Susan Krepart, who is symptomatic and waiting on her own results.

"It really, literally hit home. And I love my husband, I know he works hard, and just scared and angry that he caught it."

Krepart issued astatement about the family's situation on Facebookurging people to "stay the f--- home" and take the virus seriouslywhich has been shared over 1,000 times as of Tuesday evening.

She didn't have many close contact calls to make after she got tested, she said, but knows it's not the same for everyone.

"Pop those bubbles. If you can make a mental list right now of how many people you would have to call and it's big, those aren't easy calls to make.... I kept wanting to apologize even though there's nothing I did. Just take it seriously."

Susan Krepart says the toll of COVID-19 on her family has been difficult, scary and something people should avoid by 'popping their bubbles' and staying home. (Erin Brohman/CBC)

Callto staff ICU beds

While Mooney is hopeful for the pandemic plan that Chief Nursing Officer Lanette Siragusa will revealto hospital staff this week, he wants to see how intensive care unitcapacity will be expanded to meet the needs of fifty patients, not five.

"I am terrified," he said, adding he believes there's been a misrepresentation of what the province can actually handle.

The weeks ahead will only bring more patients, he said, and the hospitals are already overwhelmed.

"We don't have the staff. There needs to be a concerted effort to staff those beds. Whatever contingency plan becomes public in the next few days,we need to have the bodies to safely staff those critically ill patients."

He commends the staff who have been working their hearts out in times they've never seen before. Despite his illness and weakness he sat up to issue a plea to Manitobans.

"We as Manitobans have to take it upon ourselves to go further than the current public health orders. You need to self-isolate, you need to maintain your bubble, limit your contact with outside," he said.

"Wash your hands, social distance, mask when outside. It's imperative we do these things now. We're unfortunately only at the beginning of this exponential growth and I worry what the next two weeks will bring."

Winnipeg doctor with COVID-19 says hospitals are already overwhelmed

4 years ago
Duration 2:36
Dr. Owen Mooney spent last week treating patients in St. Boniface hospital's COVID wards. Now he's tested positive, isolating from his family, who he fears has it too.