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Reveal

A Young Doctor Reflects on COVID

Reveal

The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX

News

4.78K Ratings

🗓️ 24 December 2022

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The pandemic isn’t past tense. While COVID-19 vaccines have made it possible to gather with friends and hug loved ones again, the world is still living with the virus – and too many people are still dying because of it. More than a million people in the United States have died from COVID-19 since the pandemic began, including about 250,000 people in 2022. To reflect on the lives the world has lost, we’re revisiting an episode that follows a young doctor through her first year of medical residency during the height of the pandemic.

Kaiser Health News reporter Jenny Gold spent eight months following Dr. Paloma Marin-Nevarez, who graduated from the Stanford University medical school in June 2020, right before the virus began its second major surge. She was one of more than 30,000 new doctors who started residencies in 2020. Just weeks after graduating, Marin-Nevarez began training as an ER doctor at Community Regional Medical Center in Fresno, one of the areas in California hardest hit by the pandemic.

Marin-Nevarez faces the loneliness and isolation of being a new doctor, working 80 hours a week in the era of masks and social distancing. She also witnesses the inequality of the pandemic, with Latino, Black and Native American people dying of COVID-19 at much higher rates than White people. Marin-Nevarez finds herself surrounded by death and having to counsel families about the loss of loved ones. We view the pandemic through the eyes of a rookie doctor, finding her footing on the front lines of the virus.

This is an update of an episode that originally aired in February 2021.

Transcript

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0:00.0

From the Center for Investigative Reporting in PRX, this is revealed.

0:06.6

I'm Al Etzim.

0:09.6

Three years ago, as families gathered around for the holidays, an ammonia-like virus

0:14.7

was growing.

0:16.2

But it didn't have an anane yet and few knew it existed.

0:20.3

But it wouldn't be long until COVID, like some giant tsunami would wash over all of

0:25.6

us, changing everything.

0:28.5

So much has happened in the last three years, and we're in such a different place now.

0:33.6

Gone are the days of banging pots and pans for emergency workers or fearing that touching

0:38.8

a door handle may endanger your life.

0:42.0

More importantly, we can hug the people we love again, gather with family.

0:47.1

The vaccines have made that possible.

0:49.8

Lessened the danger, saved countless lives.

0:53.1

But the pandemic isn't past tense.

0:55.6

We're still living with it, and too many people are still dying because of it.

1:01.2

According to the CDC, roughly 250,000 people in the US have died from COVID so far this

1:08.3

year, and more than a million since the pandemic began.

1:12.9

So as families and loved ones gather together, some with empty seats at the table for those

1:18.4

who have been lost, we want to revisit a show we first brought you last year.

1:23.6

It follows one remarkable young doctor through her first year of medical residency during

1:28.5

the height of the pandemic.

1:30.6

The story begins in the final days of medical school.

...

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