UCSF medical chief laid low by COVID after guiding thousands on avoiding the virus (2024)

Through the miserable years of the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Bob Wachter, the University of California-San Francisco medical department chair, became a beacon of guidance to hundreds of thousands who followed his social media tips on avoiding the virus that killed more than 1.1 million Americans.

Though he works in a hospital that treated COVID patients, Wachter managed to avoid the respiratory disease through a regimen of crowd avoidance, medical-grade mask-wearing, vaccination and boosting — as well as a little luck.

But this week, he told his 274,000 Twitter followers: “my luck ran out.”

“My case is a cautionary tale, particularly for the ‘just a cold’ folks,” Wachter tweeted in a long thread about his ordeal Wednesday evening. “Mine definitely was not… I literally have scars to show for it.”

Few today pay much mind to the virus that upended life around the world from 2020 through 2022. But Wachter noted the virus is still out there and still poses a threat, though not as great as it did before mutating into less virulent variants and before widespread population immunity from vaccines and prior infection led to declining deaths and an end to public health emergencies.

Now that the federal and state public health emergencies are over, COVID cases are no longer being tracked, but people hospitalized with COVID reached an all-time low in California in recent weeks. There have been fewer than 1,000 COVID patients in the state’s hospitals since early June. Since an all-pandemic low of 611 hospitalized patients on July 2, it has risen to slightly over 800 by July 8. Federal authorities are planning an updated COVID-19 vaccine booster for the fall.

Wachter said he received his second “bivalent” vaccine booster tailored to protect against the more recent omicron variants in April, but he noted that the two-to-three month “window of protection” it offers “had passed.” He also acknowledged he “let down my guard a bit,” — he still wears an KN-95 mask on planes and in crowded rooms, but dines indoors without.

This week, Wachter said he was on clinical duty at UCSF hospitals where medical staff still are required to wear masks in patient areas.

He said he “felt fine until Sunday afternoon when, after leaving the hospital, I noticed a dry cough.”

“By Sunday night, I felt flu-ish, with a sore throat, fever, and chills,” Wachter tweeted. “Things got bad overnight. Monday, I woke up drenched in sweat, with a bad sore throat and a hacking cough.”

He took a home test for the COVID virus, which was negative, but he wasn’t convinced he didn’t have it and planned to take another. He called in sick to work, didn’t eat or drink, and “choked down 2 Tylenols.”

“Then I made a mistake — I took a shower,” Wachter wrote. “While the instinct to take a shower when you’re sweaty and gross is understandable, stepping into hot water when you’re dehydrated and flu-ish can cause your blood vessels to dilate, leading to a dangerous drop in blood pressure. And that’s what happened.”

Wachter wrote that he woke up “in a bloody pool on my bathroom floor.”

“There was a dent in the lid of a trashcan, likely where my head had hit,’ he wrote. “I remembered nothing. As I managed to get up, it was clear that my face was going to need stitches, and more than a couple.”

Wachter said he needed an overnight hospital stay, anti-seizure medication, stitches on his forehead and a neck collar for a small cervical fracture, and posted a photo of himself afterward, sporting a black eye as well.

7) The neurosurgeons stitched the back of my scalp, while an ENT-plastics chief resident did the intricate stitching of my forehead. Luckily, at my age a few scars don't bother me much, and I believe my wife likes me for reasons other than my previously seamless brow. (12/22) pic.twitter.com/l9qTzUn50a

— Bob Wachter (@Bob_Wachter) July 13, 2023

“So my first case of COVID was pretty dramatic,” Wachter concluded. “If I hadn’t passed out, it would have been 3-4 days of a pretty nasty upper respiratory illness. But I did, and so my (unusual) case goes on my list of reasons that COVID continues to be worth avoiding if you can.”

Wachter said he has no idea where he contracted the virus — he hasn’t had any COVID patients lately — “so it’s likely to remain a mystery.” And although he has “joined the 3/4 of Americans who aren’t NoVids,” he said ” I don’t think it’ll change my behavior.” As long as the case rates remain low as they are now, he said he’ll “continue being relatively careful, but no more than I’ve been.”

But he added that “I will, however, be more careful about showering or taking a hot bath or hot tub when dehydrated. That’s one important takeaway from this mess.”

Wachter said Thursday by email that “I’m healing (slowly).”

His post drew some jabs on social media from critics of the cautious COVID-avoidance he and other health experts preached that inspired economically punishing lockdowns and mask and vaccine mandates whose effectiveness came under question as the virus continued to spread.

“Do you think it was right for people to lose their jobs,” asked one responder, a business owner with a Twitter handle Rocky Mountain High, because “they wouldn’t take a vaccine that stopped” the virus “for only 2-3 months?”

But it also drew well-wishing from supporters including former White House COVID response coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha, who responded on Twitter that he was “glad to hear you are on the mend.”

“The truth is,” Jha continued, “respiratory illnesses can wreak havoc in people’s lives — something we see all the time in the hospital. And why we should continue to take it seriously.”

Staff writer Harriet Rowan contributed to this story.

UCSF medical chief laid low by COVID after guiding thousands on avoiding the virus (2024)

FAQs

Who is the chief of medicine at UCSF? ›

The Department of Medicine, led by Chair Robert Wachter and the Chair's Council, is the largest department in the UCSF School of Medicine.

Are some people less likely to get Covid? ›

Many health care workers and others have never contracted the disease despite being heavily exposed. Scientists around the world are studying whether genetic mutations make some people immune to the infection or resistant to the illness.

How much does UCSF CEO make? ›

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The President of the University recommends approval for the appointment of and compensation for Suresh Gunasekaran as Chief Executive Officer, UCSF Health, San Francisco campus, at 100 percent time, with a proposed annual base salary of $1.85 million, effective on his start date of March 1, 2022.

Who is the chief of heme onc division at UCSF? ›

Krishna Komanduri, MD, Selected as New Chief of the Division of Hematology-Oncology | UCSF Division of Hematology and Oncology.

What percentage of people never got COVID? ›

Resource Links. Nearly 1 in 4 U.S. adults and older teens had still not caught COVID-19 by the end of last year, according to new estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while 77.5% had antibodies from at least one prior infection.

Why do some people never had COVID? ›

But earlier in the pandemic, there was a study that was done where they looked at something called HLA, which is the human leukocyte antigen, which signals the immune system. They found that some people who had a mutation in the genes coding for HLA seemed to be less likely to have symptomatic infection.

What percentage of people get COVID and never know it? ›

Scientists estimate that over 20% of people who get infected with COVID never have any symptoms – and a portion of them never even know they were infected. Now a new study published in Nature on July 19 says their genetics might be why the virus didn't make them sick.

Who is the chief nurse of UCSF? ›

Maddy Pearson, DNP, RN, NEA-BC, is the Chief Nursing Executive and Vice President of Patient Care Services at the University of California San Francisco Health with a dual appointment as the Senior Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs at the UCSF School of Nursing.

Who is the director of graduate medical education UCSF? ›

| By UCSF School of Medicine

We are excited to announce the appointment of Kristina Sullivan, MD, as Director of Education and Assessment for Graduate Medical Education (GME), beginning July 1, 2022. Dr. Sullivan is replacing Dr. Erick Hung who provided exceptional leadership in this role.

Who is the chief of surgical oncology at UCSF? ›

At UCSF Surgical Oncology we are are proud to care for patients in a compassionate setting where the patient comes first. Please read the welcome message from the Chief of the Division of Surgical Oncology, Dr. Ajay V. Maker, M.D., FACS, FSSO.

Who is the SF Giants team doctor? ›

Robert Murray, MD, General Surgeon

"In the summer, growing up in Michigan, all we did was play baseball," recalls Robert Murray, MD, team doctor for the San Francisco Giants.

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