Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United Kingdom Medicine

Britons Saying Final Goodbyes To Dying Relatives By Videolink (theguardian.com) 88

People are having to use videolinks to say their last goodbyes to dying relatives with Covid-19 because hospitals are curtailing visits to prevent spread of the virus. From a report: In a sad scene that is increasingly being played out out across the country, in the early hours of Tuesday morning a patient with coronavirus was taken off a ventilator at a hospital in south-east London. His wife and two children were unable to be with him but watched at home via videolink, after agreement from staff in the intensive treatment unit.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Britons Saying Final Goodbyes To Dying Relatives By Videolink

Comments Filter:
  • maybe the NHS can get some cash via Twitch or Superchats

    Big F in chat for Removed Ventilator Guy !

  • very common in Italy (Score:4, Informative)

    by zuluWeather ( 1181641 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @12:28PM (#59870446)
    In Italy it's happening every day now. Some hospitals bought tablets to share between patients so they can keep in (video)touch with relatives and in some cases say the last goodbye.
  • âoe - the wife had been offered the opportunity of being there in person but without the children and at her own risk so she requested the family be able to watch it from home instead. - âoe

    So whatâ(TM)s the big deal !?

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      According to the TFA, some hospitals in the UK have adopted a "no visitors" rule. If they get sufficiently busy, they may not have time for virtual visitors either.

      They're probably worried about the supply of PPE. The case load in London is doubling every two days.

  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @12:49PM (#59870546) Homepage Journal

    In a sad scene that is increasingly being played out out across the country, in the early hours of Tuesday morning a patient with coronavirus was taken off a ventilator at a hospital in south-east London.

    It is so rampant, so wide-spread, that you only documented ONE CASE, specifically a case where the family CHOSE the video link option over in-person visit, because they wanted children in the ICU that's teeming with the Coronavirus.

    My mother is in a full-care active adult community, and they are refusing ALL visitors EXCEPT for hospice patients. That seems reasonable to me.

    • You unfeeling bastard! You probably don't even have an iPad OR Crossfit.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      If you bothered to read TFA, you could have saved yourself the trouble of constructing a straw man. Just because the article starts with *an* example doesn't mean it's the *only* example.

      • Well, saying something is widespread and only providing a single example, not even a quote from a healthcare provider simply saying anecdotally that this is happening more and more doesn't convince anyone.

  • From enslaving half the world, only to be eliminated in a windowless room from a tiny virus. M Nite Shyamalalan should make a movie about this. Oh, wait..

  • Seriously, the very last thing I want to give my relatives as a last good bye is a ticket to follow. If my times comes, stay the fuck away!

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @01:09PM (#59870658)

    While this is sad, the alternative to this would be to prevent any family from seeing them at all. I see this as an improvement on how this would have played out a decade ago.

  • I have imagined that at some point, the good-bye process would be modeled after Homer Moulthrop and the Hanford Project's Plastic Man [idyllopuspress.com]. The patient would be wheeled in to the "hot" room, and the relatives would crawl into the suits. Hopefully this disease isn't around long enough for routines like this to be worked out.

    • the relatives would crawl into the suits

      What fucking suits? Hospitals don't have enough suits (or masks) for the emergency personnel saving lives. They certainly have nothing to waste on family. And they won't for a long time yet to come.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

"How to make a million dollars: First, get a million dollars." -- Steve Martin

Working...