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NYC Nurse Says He鈥檚 Not Scared: 鈥業 Am Only Doing My Job鈥 For COVID-19 Patients

Before the deadly coronavirus hit New York, Francisco D铆az鈥檚 job as a gerontological nurse practitioner was educating seniors on managing their diabetes. Now, he鈥檚 at the heart of the pandemic, working in a New York City emergency room.

鈥淚 have worked during the influenza outbreaks, the swine flu, but never a public health threat of this dimension,鈥 said D铆az. April 8 was 鈥渙ne of the hardest days鈥 at his hospital, Mount Sinai West, he told KHN. Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced nearly 800 people in the state died that day from COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

Francisco D铆az, a gerontological nurse practitioner, is working in the emergency department at Mount Sinai West hospital in New York City during the coronavirus crisis and says his fluency in Spanish comes in handy for Hispanic patients and their worried families. It is, he says, 鈥渧ery important to offer them information about their loved ones, in a language they can understand.鈥 (Courtesy of Francisco D铆az)

鈥淚 am tending to a lot of Latino patients with COVID,鈥 he said. In New York City, 聽 by the virus than whites, Asians or African Americans who are not Hispanic, preliminary data from city health officials shows.

D铆az pointed out that many of his Hispanic patients cannot afford to stop working and face a higher risk of contracting the coronavirus.

His ability to speak Spanish and understanding of Latino culture make it easier for him to connect with these patients and their families, D铆az said. 鈥淔or Latinos, it is particularly difficult because with COVID-19 the patient care is more impersonal,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 touch the patient, get too close. That is why talking to the family is very important, to offer them information about their loved ones, in a language they can understand.鈥

There are in the United States, accounting for 10% of the health workforce 鈥渄espite the fact that Hispanics are 18% of the population,鈥 said Norma Cuellar, president of the National Association of Hispanic Nurses.

D铆az was born in New York City as his family took shelter there from the 1965 civil war in the Dominican Republic. After the war ended, his family moved back to Santo Domingo, where he grew up. At age 25, he moved to New York to pursue a career in health care.

On normal days, D铆az works with seniors at Mount Sinai Morningside on Manhattan鈥檚 Upper West Side while studying to earn his doctorate in nursing.

But during the coronavirus crisis, he has been transferred about 60 blocks south to Mount Sinai West. Now, depending on the day, he is in charge of eight to 12 ER patients with symptoms of COVID-19. D铆az accompanies them if they have any tests run, administers medications and takes their vital signs. He also helps describe the process to patients 鈥 in Spanish, if that is their preferred language 鈥 and, although he spends only a short time with each one, tries to keep them comfortable.

"Nurses have a very direct link with the patient," he said.

During the epidemic, he said, he has been working with patients ranging in age from 21 to over 90. Afterward, he often doesn鈥檛 know how they fared.

鈥淚 am not working in the ICU,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have to see some of them die.鈥

D铆az said he is careful in his work and anxious to make sure he doesn鈥檛 bring home the virus that would hurt his husband. Every night, immediately after arriving home, he removes all his clothes and goes straight to the shower. He said his outlook is positive: 鈥淚 am 54, but I am healthy, I do not have preexisting conditions.鈥

鈥淧eople ask me more than ever if I am scared,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 am not. I am only doing my job.鈥

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