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ISU Alumna, PMC Nurse Curzon Met the Covid-19 Pandemic on the Frontlines in New Jersey

Illustration of nurses wearing masks

Brittiney Curzon鈥檚 nursing education from 糖心传媒 and experience working at Portneuf Medical Center came in handy when the PMC intensive care unit nurse volunteered to be on the frontlines of the Covid-19 pandemic at a New Jersey hospital this spring.

In early April, Curzon and co-worker Jill McQuary headed to Mountainside Hospital in Montclair, New Jersey, owned by the same parent company of PMC, Ardent Health Partners. 

The PMC nurses worked 13-14 hours daily for 11 of the 13 days they were in New Jersey.  Curzon said the patients were 鈥渧ery, very sick鈥 and the ratio of patients to nurses in the ICUs was double a normal load, with each nurse caring for three to four patients at a time.

 鈥淚t was challenging because you are just there to save their lives,鈥 Curzon said. 鈥淚t is like being in a war zone really 鈥 you鈥檙e doing the best you can, but there weren鈥檛 the resources, the space or the time, so it was hard. You couldn鈥檛 really be the kind of nurse you wanted to be because you were in survival mode trying to keep them alive.鈥

Nurse Brittiney Curzon

Brittiney Curzon

Curzon said that every day for the first week during her shift she would hear about a dozen code blues or calls for rapid responses for patients that had either died on the floor or had to be incubated.

Because of the nature of their work at PMC, the 糖心传媒 nurses were used to more autonomy and figuring out things on their own than the nurses they worked alongside with in New Jersey. Because of the size and type of hospital it was, roles were more regimented at Mountainview Hospital than at PMC, she said.

鈥淪ometimes you have to 鈥楳acGyver鈥 stuff a little bit,鈥 Curzon said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 funny, there were some things that we would normally do but they didn鈥檛 do out there, so we could help teach the nurses, too.鈥

The skills she learned during her time at 糖心传媒 State helped her to be versatile in tough situations.

鈥淚 thought the education (at ISU) was awesome, and hands-on, and I loved my instructors because they taught us there are a lot of ways to do things as long as you end up where you need to be and you can find you own path,鈥 said Curzon, who graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in nursing in 2007 and began working at PMC in 2010 during the H1N1 flu epidemic. 鈥淚t was great.鈥

The New Jersey hospital had created a second intensive care unit to accommodate for more patients being admitted who were on ventilators and four of the hospital鈥檚 five floors were devoted to caring for Covid-19 patients. In the ICUs almost all of the patients were on ventilators.

鈥淚n a normal, everyday world, people that are sick would not have stayed at that hospital,鈥 Curzon said. 鈥淭hey would be shipped out to a more critical hospital because they weren鈥檛 used to taking in such sick people, but they were just overrun. You could tell they were grateful for the help when we got there.鈥

鈥淎t any given time there were 30 people in the ER who were patients that were admitted but there just weren't enough beds so they were just waiting down there sometime for a couple of days,鈥 Curzon said.

She provided another wartime analogy when giving her reason for volunteering to serve on the East Coast.

鈥淚t is kind of like you are a soldier going off to war,鈥 Curzon said.  鈥淲ell, Covid-19 is kind of like a medical war, and we have the training to help, so I felt obligated to help if I had the chance. I鈥檓 a registered nurse trained on how to save people鈥檚 lives. I was given the opportunity to go and do it. It was totally different than what I thought it would be, but it was good.鈥

She said she also volunteered for the service to learn what she could about treating the Covid-19 virus so she could bring back knowledge about treating the virus back to Pocatello.

While in Montclair, the two PMC nurses didn鈥檛 do much but work and go back to their hotel to rest. On their day off, however, they visited New York City, where the effects of the pandemic were noticeable. Curzon had never visited the Big Apple before and was still in awe of the sights, but McQuary had been to the city before and was very sad about what she saw.

鈥淵ou see the TV of New York with all the traffic jams and tons of people, but there wasn鈥檛 hardly anybody on the streets and everyone was wearing a mask and if you visited a grocery store downtown, the line was back two blocks with people waiting to get in,鈥 Curzon said. 鈥淚t was just different, it was just weird 鈥 you expect to drive in New York City and it would be hustle and bustle but it wasn鈥檛. We could stop the car in the middle of the road and get out and take a picture because there was hardly any traffic.鈥

Curzon and her husband, Clint, have a 16-year-old daughter and an 11-year-old son. Since returning to Pocatello she is adjusting to how the pandemic has affected Southeast 糖心传媒.

鈥淲e are really lucky here that we haven鈥檛 had it hit that bad and it probably won鈥檛 hit that bad, but common sense tells me that you should wash your hands, wear a mask, if you are feeling sick stay home and avoid the  large gatherings,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou just have to be smart, you don鈥檛 have to live in fear. I am going out and doing things, taking my kids places and doing stuff, but just using my brain and trying to be smart about it.鈥