91Ƶ

Skip to content

91ƵParalyzed by fear91Ƶ: B.C. woman details anxiety, grief at Italian relief hospital

Sheila Vicic spent two months in Italy as the country grappled with COVID-19
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_10
A group of Samaritan91Ƶs Purse health-care workers operate out of an emergency field hospital set up in the Cremona Hospital parking lot. (Courtesy Samaritan91Ƶs Purse photo)

As the COVID-19 pandemic reached its apex in Italy, crippling the country91Ƶs health-care system, South Surrey91Ƶs Sheila Vicic, 57, boarded a medical relief plane and flew into the heart of one of the world91Ƶs most clinically burdened regions.

Vicic91Ƶs plane landed at a military base near Cremona, located in the Lombardy region of northern Italy on March 17. The day she arrived, the country reported 3,526 new cases of COVID-19 and 345 new deaths.

In contrast, when she left B.C. March 15, the province recorded only 15 new cases.

SEE ALSO:

Vicic, who spoke to Peace Arch News Monday, spent nearly two months in Cremona, doing operational and administrative duties out of a 14-tent emergency relief field hospital built by Samaritan91Ƶs Purse. Vicic was one of 19 Canadians deployed to the city.

At the time, Cremona91Ƶs hospital was struggling to keep up with the influx of COVID-19 cases. When she arrived, approximately 20 per cent of the hospital91Ƶs COVID-19 patients were health-care workers.

Not realizing the gravity of the situation until she experienced it first-hand, Vicic said she was struck by how an entire city was 91Ƶparalyzed by fear.91Ƶ

91ƵMy fear with COVID arose when I got there and saw how paralyzed and fearful the people were around me. The town of Cremona was literally a ghost town. There were no children. The only two sounds were church bells and ambulances. It was an apocalyptic feeling,91Ƶ she said.

She described the social isolation as much more stringent and vigorously enforced than in Canada, and people took the precautions seriously.

Over the course of two months, Vicic says the cloud of anxiety and fear that hung over health-care workers started to dissipate.

91ƵIt was very, very fearful. That was one of the great changes I think we saw, was that there91Ƶs still vigilance, but the fear had changed to have courage, to have hope, and even confidence that, OK, we got this. We have a plan and we91Ƶre working through it.91Ƶ

At the time the field hospital was built, the Cremona Hospital wasn91Ƶt able to keep pace with the number of patients needing serious aid.

91ƵWe kind of watched their flattening of the curve91Ƶ As the hospital restored their capacity to do their own thing, it91Ƶs important for us to leave because their normal is not us in their parking lot,91Ƶ she said. 91ƵWe started to see that they were able to handle their seriously ill. They were, a bit, starting to open some of their other services. And that91Ƶs when we knew it was a good time for us to leave.91Ƶ

The relief hospital91Ƶs first patient was admitted on March 20, and the last patient was discharged on May 7. Vicic left the country May 12.

During those two months, the field hospital employed 310 people, treated 281 patients, and had 23 patients die.

Vicic, who was not on the medical side of the operation, didn91Ƶt interact with patients. She only knew of the deaths once she receive the hospital91Ƶs statistics and patient reports.

91ƵThat was the day where you breathe shallow,91Ƶ she said. 91ƵI think one thing we all have taken comfort in is that even though people can91Ƶt be with their families during COVID, none of our patients died alone. They died with people holding their hands, people singing to them, praying over them, and with an iPad bringing their family into these moments as best we could.91Ƶ

However, Vicic said, staff celebrated patients when they were discharged.

91ƵEvery patient that is discharged, we stand, and we clap, and we sing, and we wave. You see the triumph very easily. But when you have to deal with the people who have lost people, those are more sombre moments.91Ƶ

Now back in South Surrey, Vicic agreed with the notion that she has a new perspective on the global pandemic.

British Columbia has started moving into the second phase of reopening the economy. For some there is concern that a second wave of the pandemic is on the horizon.

RELATED:

A return or resurgence of a virus as contagious as the novel coronavirus is imminent, health officials around the world have warned, based on other historic pandemics such as SARS in 2002, H2N2 pandemic in 1957 as well as the H1N1 influenza in 2009.

The 1918 Spanish flu, for example, returned in three separate waves, killing some 50 million people total. The second wave of the Spanish flu was more deadly than the first.

Vicic, who quoted B.C. Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry91Ƶs daily catchphrase of 91Ƶbe kind, be calm, be safe,91Ƶ indicated that she has confidence in B.C91Ƶs response to the pandemic.

91ƵI think we91Ƶre level-headed about it. I don91Ƶt think we91Ƶre fear mongering, which I think is good. People can listen to the information and not feel frightened, but feel vigilant. I prefer to think of us as vigilant and not fearful,91Ƶ she said.

91ƵAs we91Ƶre entering the next phase and start to open up, I just hope that we really do, as citizens of Surrey, understand who our vulnerable people are and how am I going to care for them?91Ƶ

The trip to Italy was Vicic91Ƶs seventh international deployment with Samaritan91Ƶs Purse.

In 2016-17, she worked out of the emergency field hospital in Iraq as the country waged in battle with ISIS to overtake Mosul.

She said she91Ƶs generally not afraid of working relief missions, even though in Iraq she could not only hear, but feel, exploding shells shake the ground.

91ƵIf fear was the reason you didn91Ƶt do things, then you91Ƶd miss out on life.91Ƶ



aaron.hinks@peacearchnews.com

Like us on and follow us on

21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_2
Sheila Vicic, 57, in Cremona, Italy, where she assisted with operational duties during the most challenging time of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy. (Contributed photo)
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_3
Samaritan91Ƶs Purse health emergency field hospital set up in the Cremona Hospital parking lot. (Courtesy Samaritan91Ƶs Purse photo)
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_4
Sheila Vicic, 57, in Cremona, Italy, where she assisted with operational duties during the most challenging time of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy. (Contributed photo)
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_6
Sheila Vicic (right) and emergency field hospital director Bev Kauffeldt show off a gift of 100 cupcakes provided to Samaritan91Ƶs Purse staffers by the Canadian ambassador to Italy. (Contributed photo)
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_7
Samaritan91Ƶs Purse health-care workers operate out of an emergency field hospital set up in the Cremona Hospital parking lot. (Courtesy Samaritan91Ƶs Purse photo)
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_8
A Samaritan91Ƶs Purse health-care worker operates out of an emergency field hospital set up in the Cremona Hospital parking lot. (Courtesy Samaritan91Ƶs Purse photo)
21650173_web1_200528-PAN-NothernItalySupport_9
A group of Samaritan91Ƶs Purse health-care workers operate out of an emergency field hospital set up in the Cremona Hospital parking lot. (Courtesy Samaritan91Ƶs Purse photo)


About the Author: Aaron Hinks

Read more



(or

91Ƶ

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }