Questions for any doctors &/or hospital admins that care to answer. My neighbor up here in Pennsylvania is male, 66, overweight but very physically active, and has diabetes and had a heart attack ~10 years ago. He is not vaccinated.
He has all of the classic symptoms of Covid - short of breath, loss of taste & smell, low blood ox count, etc.
His wife took him to the local hospital (a small rural hospital that is part of the UPMC system) day before yesterday and they kept him overnight and then released him the next day. All that they did for him was give him a saline drip and some antibiotics. They also gave him a Covid test but told him that it would take 3-5 days to get the results back.
His wife took him back to the hospital this a.m. when his blood ox count dropped to 86.
Why did the hospital release him yesterday? Why didn't they do more for him, such as administer monoclonal antibodies? My impression is that time is of the essence concerning treatment, so why the delay?
He has all of the classic symptoms of Covid - short of breath, loss of taste & smell, low blood ox count, etc.
His wife took him to the local hospital (a small rural hospital that is part of the UPMC system) day before yesterday and they kept him overnight and then released him the next day. All that they did for him was give him a saline drip and some antibiotics. They also gave him a Covid test but told him that it would take 3-5 days to get the results back.
His wife took him back to the hospital this a.m. when his blood ox count dropped to 86.
Why did the hospital release him yesterday? Why didn't they do more for him, such as administer monoclonal antibodies? My impression is that time is of the essence concerning treatment, so why the delay?