Pea-n-Me
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 41,366
(Sorry, I know this has been addressed but started it before.)
As for the IT people, yes, surprised to see that scoffed at here. Look, hospitals are making a concerted effort to keep Covid at bay by vaccinating as many staff as possible, especially those whose jobs involve being around patients and patient care areas, both continually or intermittently/as needed. Hospitals are very high-tech now - more than one can even imagine! And as pp’s mentioned, techs are necessary to keep everything running smoothly so nursing staff can concentrate on actually taking care of patients rather than fighting with equipment. It can be a constant battle trying to get things to work, and it‘s incredibly frustrating when they don’t. Especially when each and every time you go in a room you have to put on PPE (gloves, gown, N95 and shield with covid or rule out covid pts, which, in many cases, is every patient when they are first admitted), and take it off extremely carefully upon exiting, wiping everything down as well as cleaning yourself off, etc. The simple act of going in and out of patient rooms has become tremendously labor-intensive. So if you have a computer or other piece of equipment that needs to be fixed or updated or any number of things, it takes you away from patient care, and we all know how hard that is on everyone.
Outside of rooms there are also risks. Covid has spread in some hospitals like wildfire. You come in and find out the person you were working next to the week before has tested positive for Covid. You start to think about all the equipment you both touched for days. And the air space you shared, bathrooms, kitchenettes, break rooms, etc. Voluntary testing in hospitals yields a good amount of asymptomatic cases that are positive. It takes many types of job categories to run a hospital. Bottom line it is safer for all concerned in hospitals the more staff are vaccinated.
As for the IT people, yes, surprised to see that scoffed at here. Look, hospitals are making a concerted effort to keep Covid at bay by vaccinating as many staff as possible, especially those whose jobs involve being around patients and patient care areas, both continually or intermittently/as needed. Hospitals are very high-tech now - more than one can even imagine! And as pp’s mentioned, techs are necessary to keep everything running smoothly so nursing staff can concentrate on actually taking care of patients rather than fighting with equipment. It can be a constant battle trying to get things to work, and it‘s incredibly frustrating when they don’t. Especially when each and every time you go in a room you have to put on PPE (gloves, gown, N95 and shield with covid or rule out covid pts, which, in many cases, is every patient when they are first admitted), and take it off extremely carefully upon exiting, wiping everything down as well as cleaning yourself off, etc. The simple act of going in and out of patient rooms has become tremendously labor-intensive. So if you have a computer or other piece of equipment that needs to be fixed or updated or any number of things, it takes you away from patient care, and we all know how hard that is on everyone.
Outside of rooms there are also risks. Covid has spread in some hospitals like wildfire. You come in and find out the person you were working next to the week before has tested positive for Covid. You start to think about all the equipment you both touched for days. And the air space you shared, bathrooms, kitchenettes, break rooms, etc. Voluntary testing in hospitals yields a good amount of asymptomatic cases that are positive. It takes many types of job categories to run a hospital. Bottom line it is safer for all concerned in hospitals the more staff are vaccinated.