GoodTaste
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- Feb 19, 2016
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The expression Many patients with the “happiest” hypoxemia appears to suggest that the patients of COVID-19 have experienced some form of euphoria due to hypoxemia. I am not sure. The patients are captured by the elation, unaware of the danger of the diseas.
The key clue in understanding is: without the existence of euphoria, how could you describe it as "happiest"?
Does "happiest" here suggest some form of euphoria?
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The second reason has been the unexpected utility of frequent follow-up visits made by our team members that make them more available to the community. Many patients with the “happiest” hypoxemia — those with minimal or no dyspnea — are young, relatively healthy people who might not otherwise present for medical care at all. We try to evaluate everyone in the household when we are visiting elders, and we frequently discover people with oxygen saturations of 80% or lower who did not know they were infected. Only by being in the field are we able to identify such patients early, initiate supportive care, and perhaps save a few lives.
Source: New England Journal of Medicine July 2, 2020
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.105...=featured_home
The key clue in understanding is: without the existence of euphoria, how could you describe it as "happiest"?
Does "happiest" here suggest some form of euphoria?
====================
The second reason has been the unexpected utility of frequent follow-up visits made by our team members that make them more available to the community. Many patients with the “happiest” hypoxemia — those with minimal or no dyspnea — are young, relatively healthy people who might not otherwise present for medical care at all. We try to evaluate everyone in the household when we are visiting elders, and we frequently discover people with oxygen saturations of 80% or lower who did not know they were infected. Only by being in the field are we able to identify such patients early, initiate supportive care, and perhaps save a few lives.
Source: New England Journal of Medicine July 2, 2020
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.105...=featured_home