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Dr. Jeldah J. Nyamache
The day I Collapsed in Theatre
Experience is the best teacher or so it is said. Responding to disasters becomes usual for a significant chunk of your career if you are a health worker especially in public and primary health settings. No disaster resembles any other and that is why they cause such panic. I have learned that in some instances, even a good plan does not completely deter panic and stress during response. The seemingly sensible thing is to ‘’redeem time’’ by sleeping less, staying awake, alert, reading and knowing everything about the disaster all the time. Or at least try to keep up with it… Growing up I knew that it was nothing short of laziness to sleep for long hours. Long being relative but in my mother’s house 8 was as far as it could go. It was also specific that these hours had to be planned in a way that one wakes up by latest 6:00 am in order to avoid the endless lecture on laziness mother dearest would give.
The opposite was of course true, only that you did not get endless praises. A nice cup of tea accompanied by a question as to whether you were so busy hence, the little or no sleep the previous night as evidenced by puffy eyes was actually a compliment…no long lecture. The situation was worse in medical school even though no one was around to directly ask.
Most of us have been there in one way or the other.
Perhaps it is for times such as this COVID-19 pandemic that the lesson of little sleep=hardworking was being entrenched in some of us. How does one have sound sleep when uncertainty, fear, pressure and even hopelessness or disenchantment abound? If you have responsibilities, you will testify to those many days that sleep has been pushed so far down your priority list. Intentional sleep deprivation is common nowadays also due to unclear understanding of the health value and importance of sleep. I have recently realized that when I deliberately go to bed in time to try and cover the 8 hours at least 50% of those will be spent alert in my mind. The different interconnected areas of my brain are accustomed to scanning the checklists up and down as I just lay there: family, work, school and social obligations to mentions but a few.
The ever-growing to-do lists need to end before I can really sleep for the 8 hours. Sometimes I even quickly grab a gadget in the middle of the night to make draft notes so that I can polish the next morning. Studies have shown that lack of enough sleep can increase chances of developing conditions like hypertension, diabetes, obesity and even depression. It could also lead to emotional challenges and poor job performance. Then add the issues from disasters ranging from war, floods, cholera, food insecurity, malaria, lack of shelter, locusts, loss of property etc. Imagine these risks combined with the anxiety that this pandemic carries in its tide. In my opinion, immunity automatically stands to plummet due to the high stress levels and this is where COVID-19 thrives based current data. To continue...
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