Grace Lozinski
Job: Medical doctor and chief quality officer at Hoag
Residence: Irvine
Family: Daughters Nicolette Petrie, 10, and Natasha Petrie, 8. Her husband, Russell
Petrie, is an orthopedic surgeon.
What is your role on the
COVID-19 team at Hoag?
“I am working very closely with infection prevention, as well as
administration and medical staff leadership on our preparedness efforts.”
What’s it been like on the frontline?
“At times overwhelming, but more than anything, the collaboration
has been tremendous with regard to everybody pitching in, everybody using
their particular skillset, talent, leadership skills, everybody coming
together and in a concerted effort to really ensure that we are prepared
to take care of the patients we have and also prepared to handle additional
volume that may come our way as well. There’s been so many moving
parts and everybody’s working so diligently and in such a collaborative
fashion to really ensure that we’re as prepared as we can be and
also delivering great care to the patients that have already been through
our hospital, or in our hospital currently. It’s been a tremendous
effort, incredibly humbling as well.”
How does COVID-19 compare to what you’ve experienced before?
“The biggest challenge is the unknown. Humans have never seen this
disease. We don’t have immunity to it. There’s obviously not
a vaccine. Right now we’re going through all the different possible
treatments. There’s no playbook for this. And that’s what’s
causing I’d say a lot of the angst is the concept of the unknown.
… I think identifying what a COVID patient looks like when they
hit our doors — we’re learning. We are learning and the best
way I can put is probably, we’re building the plane and we’re
flying it at the same time. But we’re doing that very rapidly.”
Are you concerned about your family’s exposure?
“We take care of dozens of communicable diseases here at this hospital.
We are used to taking care of things such as tuberculosis, sometimes measles
believe it or not, multi-drug resistant organisms. I subscribe …
to strict hand hygiene, doing all the things that the CDC is telling us
to do — avoiding touching my face, rubbing my eyes. I am washing
my hands probably no less than 100 times a day or sanitizing them. …
I’m pretty much doing everything I’ve always done when I take
care of other communicable diseases.”
How have things changed at home?
“The kids are at home and they’re doing distance learning
at this point. They are pretty savvy when it comes to understanding the
importance of the hygiene … they understand this is a global issue.
We’re very lucky in that they’ve adapted well. My husband
and I have been very honest about it … but in a very matter-of-fact
manner without trying to dramatize it. The information that we do share
with them is I think age-appropriate. When we get home, my husband and
I, we do not talk about COVID non-stop. If the kids have a question, we’re
happy to answer it. We want to maintain that sense of normalcy.”
Did you ever imagine you’d be on the frontline of something like this?
“I’m a biologist by training … and actually spent quite
a bit of time in a virology lab after college. And actually ran research
on viruses at UC San Diego. I’ve had a healthy, healthy respect
for infections, in particular viruses, for quite some time. I trained
at the tail end of the AIDS epidemic, I lived through H1N1 in the late
2000s, and then obviously with the Ebola situation over the past few years
as well, I knew it was just a matter of time before one of these viruses
was gonna be what I like to call the Goldilocks virus. I always felt that
this was just a matter of time before the right virus would come up that
would be able to hit all those parameters and it would really be a true
pandemic.”
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