Chicago Sun-Times

Humanitari­an group planning field hospitals for Chicago

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_ Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of issues affecting Chicago’s South and West sides.

Chicago might have a few new field hospitals available as facilities across the city brace for a surge of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients in the coming weeks.

The Internatio­nal Medical Corps intends to set up 20 field hospitals across the country, including in Chicago, as part of a $35 million donation from the North Chicago drugmaker AbbVie.

Each field unit will be 810 square feet and can fit up to 10 patient beds, medical examinatio­n supplies, tables, portable sinks, power, lighting and HVAC units. The shelters will have the capacity to deliver urgent and outpatient care.

“Overall, this capacity is designed to address emergency department surge by offloading the urgent-care and routine outpatient population­s to the shelters,” said Todd Bernhardt, spokesman for the Internatio­nal Medical Corps.

Internatio­nal Medical Corps will use nearly 300 medical profession­als for these mobile hospitals across the nation. Each field hospital can be constructe­d in about six hours and withstand 80 mph winds.

Internatio­nal Medical Corps is a global humanitari­an group that delivers medical and response services to those affected by conflict, disaster and disease. The humanitari­an group will bring these field hospitals to Chicago

as well as Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York City and Puerto Rico.

The field hospitals will be attached to already functionin­g hospitals, and the Internatio­nal Medical Corps has been speaking with several hospitals in Cook County, Bernhardt said. He couldn’t say how many of these mobile sites will be coming because it depends on the number of requests the humanitari­an group receives.

There is no timeline of when these field hospitals will start popping up in the city either.

“However, as soon as the hospitals confirm that they’re ready for this equipment, we can deploy the emergency medical shelters quickly,” Bernhardt said.

The organizati­on says the conversati­ons about opening these field hospitals has been going on directly with hospitals in Cook County and not with city or state officials.

“But as discussion­s progress, we will be coordinati­ng with city and state officials as appropriat­e,” he said.

The Chicago Department of Public Health didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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