After 22 Days, UAB Staff Celebrate First COVID Patient Released From ICU

 ========= Old Image Removed =========Array
(
    [_wp_attached_file] => Array
        (
            [0] => 2020/04/Patient_Release-3_1.jpg
        )

    [_wp_attachment_metadata] => Array
        (
            [0] => a:5:{s:5:"width";i:2894;s:6:"height";i:1628;s:4:"file";s:31:"2020/04/Patient_Release-3_1.jpg";s:5:"sizes";a:10:{s:9:"thumbnail";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-140x140.jpg";s:5:"width";i:140;s:6:"height";i:140;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:6:"medium";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-336x189.jpg";s:5:"width";i:336;s:6:"height";i:189;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:12:"medium_large";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-768x432.jpg";s:5:"width";i:768;s:6:"height";i:432;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:5:"large";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-771x434.jpg";s:5:"width";i:771;s:6:"height";i:434;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:9:"wbhm-icon";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:29:"Patient_Release-3_1-80x80.jpg";s:5:"width";i:80;s:6:"height";i:80;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:13:"wbhm-featured";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-600x338.jpg";s:5:"width";i:600;s:6:"height";i:338;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:20:"wbhm-featured-square";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-300x300.jpg";s:5:"width";i:300;s:6:"height";i:300;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:18:"wbhm-featured-home";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-553x311.jpg";s:5:"width";i:553;s:6:"height";i:311;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:22:"wbhm-featured-carousel";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-470x265.jpg";s:5:"width";i:470;s:6:"height";i:265;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}s:14:"post-thumbnail";a:4:{s:4:"file";s:31:"Patient_Release-3_1-125x125.jpg";s:5:"width";i:125;s:6:"height";i:125;s:9:"mime-type";s:10:"image/jpeg";}}s:10:"image_meta";a:12:{s:8:"aperture";s:1:"0";s:6:"credit";s:0:"";s:6:"camera";s:0:"";s:7:"caption";s:0:"";s:17:"created_timestamp";s:10:"1586760156";s:9:"copyright";s:0:"";s:12:"focal_length";s:1:"0";s:3:"iso";s:1:"0";s:13:"shutter_speed";s:1:"0";s:5:"title";s:0:"";s:11:"orientation";s:1:"1";s:8:"keywords";a:0:{}}}
        )

    [_media_credit] => Array
        (
            [0] => UAB University Relations
        )

    [_navis_media_credit_org] => Array
        (
            [0] => 
        )

    [_navis_media_can_distribute] => Array
        (
            [0] => 
        )

)
1665272109 
1587121850

The symptoms started soon after Bill Chambers returned from vacation in early March. His daughter, Meg Chambers, says family members were not overly concerned, but about a week later, his condition worsened. Bill had a high fever and was struggling to breathe. 

“He could really hardly talk to me,” Meg says. “He was having a very hard time. He was just so sick and he just, you know, told me, he said ‘I’m very sick.’ And, you know, for my dad to say that, I knew, it was pretty serious.”

Sixty-five-year-old Bill tested positive for COVID-19. He was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit at UAB Hospital and placed on a ventilator. 

Meg says everything happened quickly, followed by days of waiting. She says that was the hardest part, especially since no one could visit him. 

“In a typical world, in a normal daily basis, you would still be able to see those people,” she says. “We would have still been able to go up there and be with my dad and hold his hand and talk to him. We weren’t even able to do that during this time.”

Meg says someone from the hospital called just about every day with an update. And eventually, her dad started to improve. He was taken off of the ventilator and moved to a step-down unit. 

That’s where he met Kendall McFarland, a registered nurse who cared for Chambers on his last day at UAB. By then, he had been in the hospital for 22 days. 

“Whenever I told him the news that he was gonna get to go home, he immediately started tearing up,” McFarland says. “And that really touched me. So I was like, you know, he has been here for a long time, away from family, away from friends, so we ought to do something a little special for him.”

Staff donned party hats and lined the hallway to cheer for Chambers as McFarland wheeled him out of his room. McFarland says the best part was when Chambers saw his fiance waiting for him outside.

“We walked him out the door, she was just standing there and she just immediately broke down,” McFarland says. “And she came running up to him. She asked if she could hug him and then they just embraced for, what felt like, five minutes. That put everything into perspective. It made the whole process, all of the hard work that we do, completely worth it.”

After leaving the hospital, Chambers spent a few days in rehabilitation. His family says he is now back home resting and regaining his strength.

 

‘Fairyland’ recalls a girl’s life with her poet father in pre-AIDS San Francisco

Alysia Abbott's memoir about growing up in 1970s San Francisco with her gay, single father, has been adapted into a film directed by Andrew Durham and produced by Sofia Coppola.

Los Angeles: Spaghetti Cumbia, a band born from cultural fusion

Photographers and storytellers Karla Gachet and Ivan Kashinsky document cumbia music in Colombia, Mexico, Ecuador, Peru, Argentina and the United States.

What are your holiday shopping plans? NPR wants to hear from you

Is this the season of cutbacks or splurges? As we prepare to cover holiday shopping and deals, NPR wants to hear from you, whatever your plans may be.

Laufey was an ‘odd fish’ in native Iceland. Now she’s a jazz-pop star

The Grammy Award-winning singer and musician had rigorous classical training. Now she's making music that crosses genres: "I've been inspired by Golden Age films, the va-va-voom of it all," she says.

What does Montreal sound like?

World Cafe is kicking off its latest Sense of Place series with a playlist that offers a glimpse of Montreal's lively music scene.

Dozens of Bob Ross paintings will be auctioned to help public TV after funding cuts

Thirty of Ross' trademark landscapes will be sold at a series of auctions starting in November. He painted many of them live on The Joy of Painting, which started airing on PBS in the 1980s.

More Coronavirus Coverage