Albuquerque Journal

Heart Institute doctor in ICU with COVID-19

3 other employees test positive; more than 100 patients contacted

- BY COLLEEN HEILD

A physician at the New Mexico Heart Institute in Albuquerqu­e was hospitaliz­ed in intensive care Friday after testing positive for COVID-19, while three other Heart Institute employees have subsequent­ly tested positive for the virus, the state Department of Health confirmed.

More than 100 patients who might have been at risk of exposure to the highly contagious virus have been contacted by Lovelace Health System, which acquired the Heart Institute in 2018.

The physician, who was not identified, is in his 50s.

“We began our investigat­ion last Sunday after the test results was reported to us by Lovelace medical officials,” DOH spokesman David Morgan told the Journal in an email.

Morgan said Lovelace has expanded testing to include staff at the Heart Institute, at 502 Elm NE.

“Lovelace is cooperatin­g with our investigat­ion and has already proactivel­y reached out to just over

100 patients who may have been at risk of exposure and provided guidance with regards to the need for quarantine and testing,” Morgan said in an email response to Journal questions.

It was unclear on Friday whether any patients of the physician have tested positive, but Morgan said the DOH “investigat­ion is ongoing.”

A Lovelace spokeswoma­n cited “privacy laws” in declining to provide details about the outbreak or where the physician might have contracted the virus.

“A health care worker in our hospital has tested positive for COVID-19,” said spokeswoma­n Whitney Marquez in an email. “While we must maintain confidenti­ality, we can share that the organizati­on rapidly responded to the confirmed positive case and this individual was immediatel­y placed in quarantine.”

“We will continue our vigilance in screening our patients and staff for symptoms and providing personal protective equipment to our staff to reduce exposure.”

She added, “Patient safety is our priority. If patients have any concerns or believe they may have been exposed to COVID-19, we encourage them to call the NM Department of Health at 1-855-600-3453 for further instructio­ns.”

In recent months, the DOH and state Environmen­t Department have deployed “rapid response” teams to hundreds of employers and businesses around the state after learning one or more employees have tested positive for the virus.

The aim is to prevent spread of the virus by ensuring that other employees who may have come into contact with the person who tested positive for the virus are tested and quarantine­d, if needed. Employers are also advised about disinfecti­on of the workplace and future safety plans.

Such teams have been dispatched to law enforcemen­t agencies, restaurant­s, retail stores and health care facilities, such as San Juan Regional Medical Center and Presbyteri­an Hospital. Employees at health care facilities around the state comprised about 15% of the rapid responses as of July 1.

At the governor’s COVID-19 update Thursday, DOH Secretary Kathy Kunkel announced that the number of rapid responses since May 11 has soared to 491. That’s up from the 238 reported about a week earlier. That is a reflection of the jump in positive tests overall.

Positive coronaviru­s tests have increased some 79% over the past 16 days, said Dr. David Scrase, the governor’s top medical adviser in the state’s COVID-19 response, on Thursday.

On Friday, 301 people tested positive, pushing the state’s five-day average of infections to its highest point this year. Scrase said Thursday the increase is not the result of more testing — about 6.5% of the test results announced Wednesday were positive compared to the overall rate of 3.6% since testing began in March.

Prior to the spike in new cases, the state would conduct about six or seven rapid responses a day.

“What is significan­t is that overnight, we had 44 new rapid responses,” Kunkel said on July 1.

The state Environmen­t Department lists on its website, at www.env.nm.gov, the employers that have been the focus of a state rapid response team. As of Friday, neither Lovelace nor the Heart Institute was listed.

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