Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

IDA FORCES Louisiana hospitals to shift patients.

- MELINDA DESLATTE AND RUSS BYNUM Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jeff Martin and Joshua Boak of The Associated Press.

BATON ROUGE — Louisiana hospitals in the path of Hurricane Ida were forced to evacuate dozens of patients after the storm left them with pieces torn off their roofs and water leaking down walls to pool on floors as they relied on emergency generators for electricit­y.

Ida smashed into the Louisiana coast Sunday at a time when most hospitals were nearly full with coronaviru­s patients. Hospitals that suffered the worst damage worked Monday to transfer patients to other medical centers in the state, while others kept operating on generator power.

At Lady of the Sea General Hospital in Lafourche Parish, near where Ida made landfall, the storm ripped away a significan­t portion of the roof.

On Monday morning, members of the U.S. Coast Guard managed to fly in and evacuate about seven patients, Gov. John Bel Edwards said on a call with President Joe Biden and other governors.

Ochsner Health, which runs Louisiana’s largest hospital network and had about 15 hospitals in Ida’s path, evacuated 165 patients Monday from three hospitals from Houma and Raceland in the hard-hit bayou region, said Warner Thomas, Ochsner Health’s president and CEO.

Despite the evacuation­s, those hospitals still had emergency rooms open Monday, he said. Other Ochsner Health facilities in New Orleans and elsewhere stayed fully open, even after water leaked inside after the storm blew off rooftop ventilatio­n covers and broke a few windows. All were running on generators, and some used water from private wells.

“We know that we’re in for several days, maybe a couple of weeks of this situation,” Warner Thomas told reporters in a video conference Monday.

Dr. Joseph Kanter, Louisiana’s chief health officer, said Monday on Twitter that major hospitals seemed to have suffered minor damage, while a few smaller hospitals “suffered significan­t damage.”

Kanter urged people to avoid going to hospitals if possible, saying they “will be busy” in coming days.

New patients began to show up in emergency rooms Monday morning seeking treatment for storm-related injuries. Thomas said he expects those cases will grow as residents doing repairs and cleanup break bones falling off ladders or cut themselves with chainsaws.

“It’ll be tight. It’s been tight throughout covid, as we know,” said Mike Hulefeld, Ochsner Health’s chief operating officer. “We have adequate physical space … but it’s about having adequate people and staff.”

Hulefeld said Ochsner Health went into the storm with enough fuel to power generators for 10 days, and efforts to replenish that supply were underway. He anticipate­d no problems bringing in enough water, food or medical supplies.

Hospitals in Mississipp­i and Alabama have reached out, offering to take in some of the company’s patients, Thomas said, but so far administra­tors were finding room elsewhere in Louisiana.

Edwards said Louisiana was prioritizi­ng power restoratio­n to hospitals because so many are on generator power — 51, according to the Louisiana Department of Health. The governor said federal and state disaster response agencies are working to put technician­s at the hospitals “to keep the generators running as long as possible, but also to (determine) exactly what size generator is needed so we can get a backup on site in case that one should fail.”

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said four Louisiana hospitals suffered damage.

Five Louisiana hospitals had evacuated their patients or were planning to do so Monday, said Kevin Litten, spokespers­on for the Health Department.

At Lady of the Sea General Hospital, where the Coast Guard rescued patients, CEO Karen Collins said in a Facebook message Sunday that there were no injuries. The hospital’s phone system was down Monday.

Another Lafourche Parish hospital, Thibodaux Regional Medical Center, reported a partial generator failure Sunday that forced some patients to be moved. Louisiana state Rep. Tanner Magee of Houma said Thibodaux General’s staff moved patients on ventilator­s through the stairwells to get them to another part of the hospital that had electricit­y.

Ida struck as hospitals and their intensive care units were filled with patients from the fourth surge of the pandemic, a wave fueled by the highly contagious delta variant and low vaccinatio­n rates across Louisiana.

An estimated 2,400 coronaviru­s patients were in Louisiana hospitals when the hurricane hit, according to the governor.

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