Dan was dying. His family knew he was dying. Everyone knew. But hardly anyone visited him in his home because of COVID-19.
Except of course for Wanda, his hospice nurse.
“That’s the hardest part about COVID,” said Wanda. “People dying really need loved ones to tell them it’s okay to go. But this stupid virus...”
Since the pandemic began, Wanda has been Dan’s main friend. She’s been hanging out beside him during his last days, entertaining him.
When I called Dan, Wanda was busy telling knock-knock jokes.
“Knock, knock,” said Wanda.
“Who’s there?” said Dan’s graveled voice.
“Little old lady.”
“Little old lady who?”
“Mister Dan, I had no idea you could yodel!”
Wanda says this isn’t her best comedic material, but it works in a pinch. After all, she has to remain upbeat. Other people might be able to show up for work in bad moods, but not hospice workers.
During a pandemic, hospice nurses are a lifeline to the dying. It’s hard work. Not only do they have normal duties—wound cleaning, administering meds, documenting vitals, telling knock-knock jokes—many have been going
above and beyond their job descriptions.
Take Lydia, for example, in Houston. She sometimes types emails for her patients who dictate them to her. Often these are goodbye letters.
“It’s the least I can do,” said Lydia.
An international quarantine may have paused the world, but it didn’t slow anything down for hospice professionals. It couldn’t. Helping people die is part of their job.
A hospice nurse does their work with the same pride a steelworker applies a bead of weld; or a teacher explains the Battle of Gettysburg; or a feeble redheaded writer tries to turn a weak idea into a column.
Every year about 1.6 million people enter hospice care, and all you have to do is imagine how many nurses they need. There are only 3.8 million registered nurses in the U.S. today. You…