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Angoose
28 Mar 20 20:25
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Date Joined: 18 Jul 02
| Topic/replies: 24,312 | Blogger: Angoose's blog
A man who was rushed into intensive care after contracting COVID-19 has told Sky News how his terrifying ordeal began when a bad cough turned into a collapsed lung.

Matt Dockray's wife called 999 after he "literately couldn't get off the couch" and was struggling to sit upright.

Once in hospital, doctors found one of his lungs had collapsed and the other one "wasn't doing great at all".

The 39-year-old was on his own, because family could not enter his room, and struggling to understand what medics were saying because they were wearing hazmat suits and speaking through masks.

The deepest breath he could take was a "really strong sniff" and "nothing would inflate".

Those around him in ITU were not 80 or 90-year-olds, he said. "These were young kids - there were people the same age as me."

Matt, from Marlow in Buckinghamshire, initially thought he had a cold or flu rather than COVID-19.

The Aston Villa fan first noticed symptoms when he headed to Wembley for the League Cup final against Manchester City on 1 March. He had a "bad dry cough" and a "bit of a headache".

He realised it was more serious after his parents sent him a device which measured his heart rate and oxygen saturation - which should have been at least 96%.

Matt's was down to 88%.

By the time he was admitted to hospital nine days ago he had a "real hacking cough to the point where you wanted to be sick".

"Then you lose all sense of taste or smell," he added.

"And a really bad temperature. It's definitely the worst I've ever felt with anything."

After arriving at hospital he was taken to an isolation room and "two guys came in dressed in hazmat suits with a ventilator pack on the back".
Matt said they "took swabs straight away" and "just became increasingly concerned".

He continued: "It was like something out of a movie. You've got no family with you, you don't know what's going on, no one can explain to you, and you can't hear people properly because they're talking through masks.

"It was very, very terrifying."

Once in intensive care he was "hooked up to every machine" and could hear "every alarm and bell going off".

He added: "My lung had collapsed and was failing, my other lung wasn't doing great at all, and with everything that was going on and my symptoms, the next stage was to put you on a ventilator."

But a ventilator is for support rather than treatment, he explained.

"And I think that was the most terrifying part. There's no real treatment for [COVID-19], there's no medication.

"You're expecting them to put a nice IV in and [give you] a drug to make everything better."

In the end, Matt was not put on a ventilator, but had oxygen forced into him via a nasal cannula while doctors checked his stats "from a distance".

There was a man opposite him whose family would "come up to the glass, one at a time".

"That guy lasted probably two to three days, and didn't make it," Matt said.

When he started to feel better he could "feel everything switching back on".

The nurses were "absolutely fantastic" and taught him "how to breathe again", he said.

Matt was discharged on Thursday.
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Report Angoose March 28, 2020 7:25 PM GMT
A bit more than the flu then, eh.
Report macarony March 28, 2020 7:34 PM GMT
people can die of the flu he lived depends on the individual and age as nothing to do with it if you are ill to start with
Report InsiderTrader March 28, 2020 7:37 PM GMT
Horrendous.

But anyone who has spent a lot time in an a & e resus room will have seen this type of thing bar the hazmat suits. They are the scary things I can only imagine as well as not being able to have your loved ones hold your hand.
Report InsiderTrader March 28, 2020 7:38 PM GMT
The key thing for everyone is to stay out of hospital right now.

Stay at home. Protect the NHS (and yourself and your family). Save lives.
Report macarony March 28, 2020 7:43 PM GMT
The best way to protect the NHS is make sure we still have functioning economy and somthing we don't have now and from what I am hearing from friends that have their own business that might not be something we have after the has deid down.
Report macarony March 28, 2020 7:44 PM GMT
hysteria
Report CLYDEBANK29 March 28, 2020 8:05 PM GMT
What's worse?  Being in the front line battalion on the D-Day landings or being sent to intensive care with COVID-19?
Report flushgordon1 March 28, 2020 8:07 PM GMT
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3SluRyO4EA4
Report Mexico March 28, 2020 8:35 PM GMT
And to think we have had to miss out on going for a Saturday night Indian just so the NHS had a chance to save these people.

Few on here don't think that "sacrifice " is worth making to save tens of thousands of lives.
One poster on here was calling this virus "a sniffle " , others saying just like the flu.
Report moisok March 28, 2020 9:00 PM GMT
angoose 545th  virus panic thread whipping it up yeeha!!!
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