Fayetteville native Courtway was finishing up her nurse practitioner program when the outbreak began. She was furloughed because her clinic was deemed nonessential.
“Whenever I started seeing the big need for nurses on the news and just healthcare providers to step forward I really felt the calling,” Courtway said.
She says she’s been in the city for over a week now and will be there for another eight weeks. Her assignment is in the emergency department and she works 12 hours shifts four nights a week.
“I’ve never dealt with any kind of disease or virus or anything in my seven-year of my nursing career that can compare to this virus,” Courtway said.
She says her hospital has enough PPE, but the ICU is holding way over its capacity of patients.
“I’ve got double to patients per room and they’re just completely overloaded,” Courtway said.
Obryan works for Village Travel in Springdale and says a fleet of bus drivers is in New York helping transport nurses and medical workers.
“It’s extremely stressful for them it’s a long hard hours and really tough working conditions,” Obryan said. “We’re transporting nurses back-and-forth to their work at the hospitals.”
Obryan says he has responded to many emergency situations in the past with Village Travel.
“We have worked disaster relief all over the country for him, we were down in Hurricane Katrina,” he said.
Obryan says it’s tough to be away from his family and Courtway agrees.
She says her kids are still young, but thankfully they understand the work she is doing.
“I just got off a FaceTime call with my youngest kid and said he missed me but he knew mommy was taking care of people and getting them better,” Courtway said.
Obryan says he’s been in New York since the outbreak began. He says that his daughter is having her wedding next month and if it is still permitted, there’s no way he’s missing it.
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