Chattanooga Times Free Press

ICU patients reach record levels for 3rd straight day

- BY WYATT MASSEY AND ELIZABETH FITE

The Hamilton County Health Department announced a new COVID-19 death Tuesday, bringing the county total to 41 as the numbers of hospitaliz­ations and people in intensive care units continue to break single-day records.

The death reported Tuesday — a Black woman between 71 and 80 years old — is the 11th death this month.

The health department reported 121 hospitaliz­ations and 30 people in ICUs as well, up from the previous record high a day earlier with 116 hospitaliz­ations and 29 people in ICUs. The

number of hospitaliz­ations also includes individual­s at hospitals awaiting test results for suspected infection.

Increases in hospitaliz­ations in the county continue to be driven by the virus’ impact on surroundin­g counties. Just 44 of the 121 total hospitaliz­ations reported Tuesday

were of Hamilton County residents. Tuesday marked the eighth time the single-day hospitaliz­ation record was broken this month.

Despite the continued growth in patients, personal protective equipment and testing supplies in local hospitals are adequate, Rae Bond, chairwoman of the local COVID-19 Task Force, said at a news conference on Tuesday.

Several sites across the county have been tapped as possible alternativ­e care locations should the need arise. However, Bond said the hospitals are able to handle the current patient load without a need to offload patients. The Alstom site along Riverfront Parkway, sometimes called “Big Blue,” is the only one of the possible surge sites publicly announced.

Dean Flener, spokesman for Gov. Bill Lee’s Unified Command group responding to coronaviru­s, said in an email that the state “is monitoring closely the increases in COVID-19 case numbers and hospitaliz­ations, working with the Tennessee Hospital Associatio­n and receiving updates on statewide hospital capacity, and communicat­ing daily with local leaders” about possible surge plans.

“The state is first committed to assisting hospitals with the implementa­tion of their internal surge planning to be able to extend their capacity and care for as many patients as possible in the hospital setting. In the unlikely event that the state needs to build out an alternate care site in Chattanoog­a, it would treat acute, non-critical, stable COVID-positive patients,” Flener said.

Hospitaliz­ation surges often follow a surge in confirmed cases — which began again in Hamilton County near the end of

June and have shown no sign of slowing throughout July — and it can take weeks from the time that people become infected to the time COVID-19 progresses to the point of needing hospital care.

While Hamilton County’s new public face mask requiremen­t — which went into effect July 10 — will hopefully bring some needed relief, it could take several more weeks before local transmissi­on begins to slow down as a result, Bond said.

There’s also a risk transmissi­on will spike when schools return and because COVID-19 is spreading rapidly in the rural counties that surround Chattanoog­a and rely on its hospitals.

“One of the challenges that we face as a community is that we’re surrounded by a lot of communitie­s. We’re very mobile in our region,” Bond said Tuesday. “We’re surrounded by a lot of communitie­s that don’t have mask mandates — people travel back and forth.”

It’s normal for coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ation numbers to fluctuate based on the time of reporting and how many patients have been admitted or discharged on a given day. However, some COVID-19 patients wind up staying in the hospital for more than a month, making it hard to gauge how long the current growth of patients in Hamilton County hospitals will continue.

The median length of hospitaliz­ation among coronaviru­s survivors is around 10 to 13 days, and between 26% and 32% of patients who are admitted to the hospital for COVID19 wind up in intensive care, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The health department reported 101 new infections Tuesday, bringing the county total to 4,461 with 2,832 people recovered. The county is averaging 111 new cases a day in the past week.

Whether the ongoing upward trend in cases is due to more infections or increases in testing is unclear. An accurate positivity rate for tests cannot be calculated, since the health department does not regularly update the number of tests completed. The department has not updated the number of negative tests it has recorded for 11 days.

New cases are increasing­ly driven by people under 30 years old, who now account for 42% of

Hamilton County’s confirmed COVID-19 cases.

“People of all ages are being impacted, and conversely, people of all ages can be asymptomat­ic and share the virus with others that they know and love,” Bond said.

The Tennessee Department of Health reported 2,190 new infections Tuesday as the state averages 2,165 new cases a day. There are now 81,944 total infections and 871 deaths in Tennessee since the pandemic began.

Last week, Tennessee was among 18 states considered in the “red zone” and in need of stricter measures to stop the spread of the virus, according to a White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report that was leaked. The recommenda­tions for states in the red zone were mostly targeted to responding to where local outbreaks are happening, such as closing bars and gyms in hot-spot counties and mandating face coverings.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Workers collect samples to test for COVID-19 at Brainerd High School on Monday.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Workers collect samples to test for COVID-19 at Brainerd High School on Monday.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Drivers wait in line for COVID-19 testing at Brainerd High School on Monday.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Drivers wait in line for COVID-19 testing at Brainerd High School on Monday.

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