LONG READS Issue 1003 · March 13, 2024

To Hear Your Voice  

Dr. Marc Schiffman connects isolated patients with worried loved ones

To Hear Your Voice  
Photos: Naftoli Goldgrab

When a new, mysterious virus called COVID-19 reared its head in March 2020, Weill Cornell Medicine found itself inundated with patients in critical condition. While his specialty was interventional radiology, the pandemic called for all hands on deck, and together with other colleagues, Dr. Schiffman volunteered to pivot to intensive care and do what he could to support the beleaguered ICU staff.

The day he agreed to report for duty, a contingent of volunteer ICU doctors came in from California and areas in upstate New York where the pandemic hadn’t yet hit in order to bolster the ICU staff. Dr. Schiffman and his colleagues were now no longer needed in the ICU, but they still stood ready to serve. Aiming to identify the most vital need, Dr. Schiffman took note of the patients who were kept in isolation because of safety concerns, yet realized that the medical personnel working harrowing shifts in a chaotic environment weren’t up to the task of trying to keep patients’ families updated. Frantic family members were home worrying and praying, with no way to reach out to their loved ones.

Dr. Schiffman and his colleagues recruited other doctors, all of whom would accompany the ICU doctors on their morning rounds and then break away and spend the remainder of their day calling patients’ families and supplying them with consistent daily communication.

“Every single family member we spoke to was desperate,” he recalls. “Almost all asked us to hold the phone up next to their family member’s ear so they could hear their voice. It was heartbreaking.”

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