Saturday 24 July 2021

COVID diary 2021 part 3: The Storm

 


23 July, 2021

 

Sydney has been in lockdown for nearly a month now, and today is the highest daily total so far, 136 new cases, with 50 cases infectious in the community, which is more infected people out in the community than ever before. Looks like there are lots of idiots still roaming around in the community. Furthermore, NSW Health’s ongoing sewage surveillance program has detected fragments of the virus that causes COVID-19 at sewage treatment plants at West Lindfield. It is the first ever detection at the West Lindfield sewage network, which serves the areas where I live and work. Furthermore, medical practices and even COVID vaccination centres have had cases of people of COVID coming in and getting turned into hot spots. So I believe I do have a much higher chance of exposure to COVID than the rest of the population since I work in a medical practice that is also a COVID vaccination centre which has just given out 156 vaccines last weekend!

 

My obstetrician is inclining towards me having the vaccine this time, saying he doesn’t think it will be harmful and is comfortable with me having it. He says if there is no signs of the numbers going down in the next 1-2 weeks then I should really have it. He also mentions that there are many third trimester women who are sitting on the fence about this, because 32 weeks is when a baby can be delivered relatively safely if one really does catch COVID and they had to deliver the baby prematurely.

 

Meanwhile, further changes have been made with the national COVID vaccination guidelines today. Pfizer has been approved for 12-15 year-olds, and all pregnant women have been shifted into the category 1b of the rollout, meaning all pregnant women can choose to get vaccinated now.

 

The Australia NZ travel bubble is now suspended for two months. Meanwhile, there is news saying NSW will not get any extra Pfizer supply so second doses of Pfizer could be delayed in NSW. This news is what tipped me over towards having the vaccine. Seriously, I don’t want to end up not being able to get the vaccine at a time when I may really need it.

https://www.9news.com.au/national/coronavirus-australia-updates-prime-minister-scott-morrison-speaks-after-july-23-national-cabinet-meeting/3eb30778-48e0-41a5-8b0b-ee782bff5b14?ocid=Social-9News

 

Meanwhile, my husband went on a nonstop tirade at 2am about not wanting me to have the vaccine because he thinks the risk of catching COVID is too low to justify accepting the risk of the unknown long term effects of Pfizer and refused to shut up until things turned very ugly. I ended up not getting any sleep and going for the vaccine in a very angry and suboptimal state.

 

24 July, 2021

 

Received my Pfizer dose 1 at my clinic at 1:18pm. Stayed in the clinic for 20 minutes post vaccine, nothing happened, not even any soreness at the injection site!

 

Meanwhile, cases continue to rise, with 163 new cases, and thousands of idiots are out in the Sydney CBD protesting about the lockdown today. We’ve only just managed to not get an exponential increase in new case numbers, but after this protest, who knows.

https://youtu.be/bChMy4D6Q3A


 

3:30pm: Sleepy, not sure if it was from the lack of sleep or the effect of the vaccine, and took a nap.

6:55pm: Woke up from nap, quite fatigued, felt a bit cold, and had a mild sore throat. Symptoms subsided a few minutes after waking up.

 

Friday 16 July 2021

COVID diary 2021 part 2: The Lockdown



29 June, 2021

Our clinic has decided to transition all patients to telephone consultations from 30 June until when the lockdown finishes. I’m very glad about this decision. After all, with patients who come in, when you ask them about whether they’ve got cold-like symptoms, you never know whether they’re tell the truth about their symptoms. Sometimes we get people who were previously advised to get a COVID test trying to come back without doing the test, saying their symptoms have resolved already so don’t think they need to do the test. Occasionally we even have to turn away people who try to get a face to face consult before their COVID results are out. Anyway, it does feel risky seeing patients face to face when the Delta variant is running wild in Sydney!

 

30 June, 2021

Someone posted a photo of him having the COVID vaccine at the Sydney Olympic Park. He booked 8:15am and the cue was very very long! There’s no social distancing, and he waited 40minutes before getting his shot! This makes me wonder whether people can catch COVID just in the process of lining up in a long cue like this. Could the reason why the mortality rate post-vaccination in Taiwan is so high be because people already caught COVID when they were lining up to get the vaccine?


 

3 July, 2021

Symptoms of nasal congestion, sore throat and voice change in the evening. This is the first time I’ve ever had cold-like symptoms, since the pandemic started. Guess a trip to a COVID drive-through testing centre is inevitable!


4 July, 2021

First time ever to get COVID-tested since the pandemic began! Woke early and went early to the 95 Epping Road Macquarie Park drive-through testing centre, as I don’t want to wait in a long cue or get any cross-contamination as the collectors test more people. At 7:40 am, I was the only car there. However, as soon as my engine is off, two or three cars came up behind me. Anyway, the swabbing process is very quick and I was out of there in approximately three minutes.

 


5 July 2021

Fortunately the COVID test was negative. In fact, the respiratory viruses swab was negative too. I wonder if I am having vasomotor rhinitis? It’s been extremely old in Sydney lately, sometimes down to 3oC!

 

8 July, 2021

Today, the NSW COVID numbers is the highest it’s ever been since the Sydney Delta variant outbreak! 38 new locally acquired cases! The lockdown will be extended! Just as I am starting to feel very tempted to get the Pfizer vaccine, suddenly came a young man who became unwell with chest pains after having Pfizer. Ran an ECG and sent him straight off to the ED, because the ECG showed ST changes suggestive of myocarditis/pericarditis.

The last time I felt particularly tempted to have the Pfizer was in late April, when GPs still couldn’t get the Pfizer vaccine, and our primary health network suddenly emailed us saying a limited number of appointments had become available at Westmead for GPs in our network to have the Pfizer vaccine. Suddenly, a middle aged health worker who suffered a small bleed in her brain after her Pfizer vaccine came in for review. She had no past medical history whatsoever before the shot. After getting the vaccine she felt unwell, her blood pressure shot up through the roof, and she was subsequently found to have a small bleed in her brain!!

About a week ago I had asked my obstetrician what he thinks about the COVID vaccine in pregnancy, especially now that the RANZCOG and ATAGI updated their recommendation in mid-June saying pregnant women are should be routinely offered Pfizer mRNA vaccine at any stage of pregnancy. His reply was like what I expected: he could not give a yes or no answer. He mentioned that “theoretically speaking” the mRNA vaccine shouldn’t do harm. However, everything needs to be around for at least ten years or so before we really know what’s going on, and mRNA is a new technology. The risk in Sydney is not that high at the moment but my occupation puts me at a higher risk than the rest of the population. So let’s see how things develop over the next few weeks.

Now, I’m not a fan of “theoretically speaking.” I am someone who take into account “lived experiences” seriously. And my “lived experience” is that I’ve personally seen two people with serious complications from Pfizer, but no one from AstraZeneca so far, despite our clinic having first hand experience as a vaccination centre of the AstraZeneca vaccine since April this year. Soon, more data will be on hand as our clinic give out the Pfizer vaccine to our regular patients from mid-July onwards.

Anyways, if I wasn’t pregnant I would have gotten my COVID vaccines already. Currently I do not know what will happen to the children of pregnant women who received the mRNA vaccine during pregnancy 5 years or 10 years from now. But if there is no clear and consistent downward trend to this Sydney outbreak within the next two weeks, I might just get the vaccine.






11 July, 2021



New COVID cases continues to rise every single day! 77 new locally acquired cases today! This morning, the RACGP sent a mass message to all its members urging GPs 1) to shorten the dosing interval of the AZ dose to 6 weeks, 2) to use telehealth or wear full PPE, and 3) to check that all GP staff have had a COVID vaccine.

As usual, our clinic was way ahead of the government/ Royal Colleges when it comes to COVID response. We had already been doing all of these since 29June! And remember how the government was slow to recommend masks last year? Staff in our clinic have been wearing masks every day since 28 Jan 2020!

Spent the rest of the day joining the annual Taiwan Association of Family Medicine online conference! Learnt some useful information.



 

12 July, 2021

 

Today’s new locally acquired cases are in 3 digits: 112! I’m really going to have to do telephone consultations only until the current outbreak is over!

Our clinic’s landline phone has been overwhelmed by people calling in about the Pfizer vaccine since the beginning of this month, but today it is totally non-stop! I couldn’t even use the clinic landline to do telephone consults and had to use my own mobile phone! In fact, people experienced so much trouble with the landline that they started trying to flood into our clinic reception to try and book their appointments!

 

14 July, 2021

The newly locally acquired cases are in 2 digits the last two days: 89 and 97. Lockdown is now extended until 30 July. I actually feel safer during lockdown, because once lockdown is lifted, I don’t know if I can keep doing telephone consults, and the flow of people will become more complicated again. If I am to get vaccinated in time for the opening up, I probably need to do so next week when I reach week 28, when the baby might be strong enough to endure the insult if I were to get sick from the vaccine. My mom was well after both doses of Pfizer, hope I’ve inherited the same response as her. Will ask my obstetrician again next week when I see him.

Meanwhile, telehealth is not without its troubles. As our landlines are being clogged up by calls about Pfizer, people who actually want to book phone consultations probably have difficulty doing that. Some patients are getting more agitated and aggressive due to frustrations about being unable to get through to our phone line and turn up at the reception quite angry. Furthermore, phone consultations take a longer time than the normal face to face consultations for me, because I can’t see the patient in 3D which means I don’t have the opportunity to do spot diagnosis, so I have to ask more questions, and it takes time to print and scan documents and email it back to patients etc. Medicare does not allow us to bill long consultations for phone consultations even if we go beyond 19 minutes. You earn more with face to face because you get a combination of normal length consultations and long consultations each day. It’s much easier to accidentally go beyond 19 minutes from face to face consultations because people have a greater tendency to go overtime face to face, but I can often catch up when because there are also some simple face to face patients who take up very little time.

 

15 July, 2021

News article: A nurse at Sydney’s Westmead Hospital has tested positive for Covid-19, despite being fully vaccinated and wearing full protective equipment.

https://www.news.com.au/world/coronavirus/australia/sydney-nurse-at-westmead-hospital-tests-positive-for-covid/news-story/dfd1af792008dc79e4d12cfee1872e9a

So don’t go around thinking you’re invincible once you’ve been vaccinated. I think vaccines are only a short-term fix. In fact, I am quite concerned that if people don’t continue to be careful after getting vaccinated, they can potentially catch the COVID but remain asymptomatic and keep spreading it to other people, which gives the virus more opportunity to mutate into something even more virulent in the long term.

 

16 July, 2021

The mystery box have finally arrived in our clinic at noon today. Why do I feel like this is the calm before the storm?