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Waking Up Aboard the Hospital Ship USNS Mercy

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After biking nearly 12 miles from Long Beach to Compton, California, Joshua Davis was transported by paramedics to the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center after being found stabbed with a sword.

Davis spent two days at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center before being transferred to the Navy hospital ship USNS Mercy to free up hospital space for COVID-19 patients.

A patient lies in a hospital ship bed.
Patient Treatment
Joshua Davis, a patient aboard the Navy hospital ship USNS Mercy, gives a thumbs up prior to an interventional radiology study. Davis was transferred from a local Los Angeles hospital and has been recovering aboard the Mercy, which deployed to Los Angeles in support of the nation's response efforts to COVID-19.
Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Erwin Jacob Miciano
VIRIN: 200418-N-VI515-1028

"I woke up here, and I don't even know how I got here," Davis said, while bundled in white hospital sheets in his bunk bed.

Davis says he remembers everything up to the moment of being stabbed, and then suddenly waking up in one of the 15 recovery wards aboard the Mercy. He specifically recalls being in bed number 79. He went on to say that after being stabbed, being alive and on a hospital ship from San Diego was the last place he thought he would be. 

"When we received him, he had already been treated for his laceration from his right abdomen slashed through to his left side with his intestines protruding," Navy Lt. Cmdr. (Dr.) Timothy Sehorn said. "The other hospital was successful in stopping the bleeding, treating his wound and saving his life."

Later, Sehorn and his team were able to identify and recognize a smaller, but similarly deadly, incision to Davis' small intestine.

"When you leak from your colon, it creates a massive amount of infection in your abdomen," Sehorn said. "Once that occurs, there's a snowball effect and a rapid decline of health, making it life-threatening."

Sailors attend to a patient on a hospital ship. All are wearing face masks.
Medical Services
Sailors aboard the Navy hospital ship USNS Mercy conduct an interventional radiology study and procedure on a patient, April 18, 2020. The Mercy deployed in support of the nation's response to COVID-19.
Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Erwin Jacob Miciano
VIRIN: 200418-N-VI515-1014
A patient undergoes a CT scan as two sailors wearing masks monitor the test.
CT Scan
Sailors aboard the Navy hospital ship USNS Mercy conduct an interventional radiology study and procedure on a patient, April 18, 2020. The Mercy deployed to Los Angeles in support of the nation's response efforts to COVID-19.
Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Erwin Jacob Miciano
VIRIN: 200418-N-VI515-1035

After the new incisions were discovered, Davis underwent an additional exploratory laparotomy procedure and has been recovering on the Mercy for about four weeks. An exploratory laparotomy is a surgical operation where the abdomen is opened and the abdominal organs examined for injury or disease.

“It used to hurt when I would yawn or lay down, but now I feel like I can breathe better, which is helping me sleep, too," Davis said.

During his time aboard, Davis has seen his fair share of the ship: an operating room, an intensive care unit and an interventional radiology suite.

The Mercy's wards aren't set up exactly like the hospital rooms found ashore — there is no cable television or sunrise window views. The ship's primary mission is to provide rapid, flexible, and mobile acute medical and surgical services in support of service members deployed ashore, and naval amphibious task forces and battle forces afloat.

Sailors review a radiology study.
Radiology Study
Sailors aboard the Navy hospital ship USNS Mercy review an interventional radiology study in Los Angeles, April 18, 2020. The Mercy deployed in support of the nation's response efforts to COVID-19.
Photo By: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Erwin Jacob Miciano
VIRIN: 200418-N-VI515-1076

To keep himself occupied, Davis spends most of his time practicing his artistic abilities by sketching football players and pit bulls. In an effort to make him more comfortable, hospital corpsmen have draped extra bed sheets to help diffuse the light and give him extra privacy.

While he has been able to communicate with his family, they haven't been able to come aboard the ship, so he has yet to see anyone since he was admitted.

"It's been boring here, but I'm grateful for the people who work here and who've been taking care of me," Davis said. He now awaits approval from the Mercy providers to be discharged.

(Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Erwin Jacob Miciano is assigned to the U.S. 3rd Fleet.)

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