Those of you who think being in shape can’t get it
From NYT
2020
Updated 7:12 p.m. ET
SEATTLE — At the end of February, Dr. Ryan Padgett’s colleagues in the emergency room called him over to share some news: A patient who had died the previous day had tested positive for the coronavirus — the first known death in the United States.
Everything, they knew, was about to change. Over the next several days, a parade of patients from a nearby nursing home was brought into the emergency room at EvergreenHealth in Kirkland, Wash., which emerged as the first center of the nation’s coronavirus outbreak.
The patients were in dire condition, struggling for air. But most of them were old, and some were already sick. Dr. Padgett did not worry much for himself. The 45-year-old physician kept in shape with gym visits and skiing trips. Back in college at Northwestern, he had been an All-Big Ten offensive guard, helping lead the team to the Rose Bowl after the 1995 season. In 21 years on the job, almost all at EvergreenHealth, he said he had taken only five sick days.
Then one day in early March, he felt a headache coming on, which was unusual for him. His muscles were sore. By March 9, he had a fever and a cough. Two days later, his breathing was so labored that he realized he was going to become a patient in his own hospital.
“Either this thing is a beast or I’m just not used to being sick,” he texted a friend. “My Ironman immune system failed me.”
Dr. Padgett was one of the first two emergency room physicians in the country to be hospitalized in intensive care with the coronavirus. His case, which he shared publicly on Monday for the first time, offers a harrowing window into the risks faced by front-line medical workers and the devastating impacts that coronavirus can have on some people who are otherwise healthy.
For Dr. Padgett, who hovered at one point near death in a medically induced coma, it took medical teams at two hospitals to bring him back from the brink.
Back at his home in Seattle, still weak from his three-week ordeal, Dr. Padgett in a telephone interview described an illness that left him feeling as though he had, for the first time in his life, utterly lost control.