CAPE CORAL, Fla. (WINK)—Six years after the COVID-19 pandemic began, innovations sparked by the crisis continue to transform health care today.
WINK News anchor Emma Heaton spoke with Dr. Timothy Dougherty, medical director of Cape Coral Hospital’s emergency department and Lee Health’s medical director of emergency management. He described life inside the emergency room and the breakthroughs that changed everything.
Back in 2020, doctors faced a virus they had never seen moving fast. It attacked lungs, hearts, and kidneys.
“It was unprecedented. I don’t think there’s one body system that COVID-19 did not affect,” Dougherty said.
As patients filled emergency rooms, COVID pneumonia flooded lungs, visible on X-rays and CT scans. Dougherty said protecting staff became just as critical as treating the disease.
“It was one of those critical thinking things on how to handle intubations? How do we handle codes? How do we run IV lines all the way out of a room to protect the nursing staff but still keep them monitored?” Dougherty said.
New protective equipment quickly became essential at Lee Health. From acrylic intubation covers to HVAC and HEPA hood systems, these innovations proved critical for infection control.
The smile on one employee’s face said it all—fear of the unknown gave way to appreciation for solutions.
“If at the end of the pandemic, we went back to normalcy, we went back to what we did before, and we didn’t learn about, take some of these lessons home, then I think that that was a squandered opportunity,” Dougherty said.
WINK News also interviewed Dougherty in 2021, where he said he saw short-term complications of COVID daily, including death. During that time, the vaccine was available, and his main question was why people wouldn’t get it.
During the most recent interview last month, Dougherty explained that the vaccine had become more of a political decision than a medical one. If patients back then had seen what he saw, he doesn’t think there would have been hesitation on their part.