Exhausted medics reveal harrowing reality of battle to save coronavirus patients

‘All I want is to see my wife again’: Dying Covid patient makes heartbreaking final plea from his hospital bed at the centre of the coronavirus crisis in NHS trust where the average age of inpatients has fallen by a DECADE to just 59

  • Covid patient Tony Brown told of his ‘absolutely terrible’ suffering in hospital after developing Covid-19
  • A day later he died, with his wife giving permission for his devastating interview to be aired on TV
  • Hospitals struggling with a rise in Covid patients alongside those with other conditions, with London badly hit

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Heartbreaking footage has revealed Covid patient Tony Brown’s dying wish to see his wife again just a day before he succumbed to Covid-19.

Mr Brown was a patient at the Barnet Hospital in North London where Sky News revealed the harrowing scenes on Covid wards where seriously ill patients are cared for by exhausted and over-stretched NHS staff.  

One nurse described the situation inside the Royal Free Hospital in London as like ‘hell’ due to the huge number of ‘really sick’ patients currently being treated on ventilators.

And a morturary manager at the Royal Free Hospital NHS Trust, which runs Barnet Hospital along with the Royal Free, said patients are decades younger in the second wave, with the average age now just 59 – a decade lower than it was the first time around.  

London’s hospitals have again been at the centre of England’s coronavirus crisis with wards filled with Covid-19 patients over Christmas and into the new year.

There are currently around 7,044 people in hospital with the virus in capital, with 1,217 on ventilators in intensive care. 

Daily admissions and the total number of patients have started to decline in recent days but intensive care units are still busy. 

Some hospitals in the capital were forced to convert empty wards into space for coronavirus patients while others warned they might have to send people to other parts of the country if they became too full.

The most recent NHS England data, for the week up to January 17, showed that 92 per cent of beds in the Royal Free were full over the course of the week, with an average of just 71 out of 941 beds available to take new patients.

Its critical care wards were almost completely full for that entire week, with 99 per cent occupancy on average and never more than four of 124 beds free.

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Tony Brown died a day after he gave this interview - with his wife giving permission for his words to be aired

Tony Brown died a day after he gave this interview - with his wife giving permission for his words to be aired

Tony Brown died a day after he gave this interview – with his wife giving permission for his words to be aired 

Heart-rending footage taken by Sky News showed 73-year-old lorry driver Mr Brown clinging to life in Barnet Hospital – the Royal Free’s sister hospital. 

‘We just all hope that we will live, and come out of it,’ he said on Thursday afternoon, speaking from a ward loud with the sound of hissing air used to treat people with coronavirus.

Mr Brown died on Friday night, with his widow, Linda, giving permission for his final interview to be broadcast.

Describing what he was going through, Mr Brown said: ‘Absolutely terrible. It’s very, very frightening. I’ve had some very bad nights, very worrying nights. Twice I went to ring my wife, to tell her I weren’t coming [back]. It is very hard.’

He added. ‘If people would have taken a lot more care when this come out and hadn’t ignored it, we wouldn’t be such a mess we’re in.

‘We wouldn’t have had so many deaths, so many people who are critically ill. And the NHS are fantastic, brilliant.’

Mr Brown – a lorry driver and key worker – believed he had caught the virus at work, and blamed people for ignoring social distancing and not wearing masks.

Struggling to speak but describing how much he missed his wife, Linda, he told Sky: ‘Oh I miss her.’

He hadn’t seen her for two weeks.

‘But I hope to one day,’ he added. ‘Hopefully, I will. That’s all I want now. I don’t want anything else in life.’

At Barnet Hospital, the number of Covid patients has doubled from the first wave and their average age is 59 – a decade younger than before. 

Mortuary manager Laura McMinn, said she had noticed that the people who were dying from the virus were getting younger.

‘It’s more patients in their 50s and 60s that we’re seeing this time rather than patients in their 70s, 80s, 90s, like we were first time,’ she said.

On Wednesday there were 300 patients with Covid at the Royal Free.

This figure is lower than during the first wave, but because there are more non-Covid patients the pressure on staff is higher. More than 80 of the patients were on ventilators. 

Specialist ITU nurse Nicolas Agudo described the situation inside the Royal Free Hospital as like 'hell'

Specialist ITU nurse Nicolas Agudo described the situation inside the Royal Free Hospital as like 'hell'

Specialist ITU nurse Nicolas Agudo described the situation inside the Royal Free Hospital as like ‘hell’

On Wednesday there were 300 patients with Covid at the Royal Free Hospital in London

On Wednesday there were 300 patients with Covid at the Royal Free Hospital in London

On Wednesday there were 300 patients with Covid at the Royal Free Hospital in London 

A Covid patient waving to a family member on a Zoom call - with a medical patient holding the tablet

A Covid patient waving to a family member on a Zoom call - with a medical patient holding the tablet

A Covid patient waving to a family member on a Zoom call – with a medical patient holding the tablet 

Specialist ITU nurse Nicolas Agudo said: ‘This is hell. We cannot continue like this, we need to ask people to please contribute, stay home.

‘I do understand people want to get together, you know and see their relatives. This is the result.

‘I feel like I want to cry in many moments. I mean, I can’t do my job properly.’ 

Dr Mike Spiro, an intensive care consultant, said that London hospitals were now so full they had been considering sending patients to the Midlands.

‘We’ve seen a huge number of really, really sick patients,’ he said.

‘So, there is a limit to the critical care capacity in London. Not just physical space, but also nursing staff numbers, and the ability to care for those patients.’ 

But with some 97,939 deaths now recorded Britain is set to hit the grim milestone of 100,000 lives lost since the start of the pandemic. It will be the fifth country to do so after the United States, Brazil, India and Mexico.

But with some 97,939 deaths now recorded Britain is set to hit the grim milestone of 100,000 lives lost since the start of the pandemic. It will be the fifth country to do so after the United States, Brazil, India and Mexico.

The UK has recorded another 30,004 Covid cases, down almost a quarter on last Sunday, and a further 610 deaths today

The UK has recorded another 30,004 Covid cases, down almost a quarter on last Sunday, and a further 610 deaths today

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