Chicago Sun-Times

HOSPITALS BRACE FOR BIGGEST COVID- 19 SURGE YET

Virus patients using 20% of intensive care beds and more than 10% of the rest — and those numbers are rising rapidly

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@ suntimes. com | @ BrettChase Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Chicago hospitals are preparing for an onslaught of COVID- 19 cases amid prediction­s that a new surge is going to be bigger than any seen yet during the pandemic.

Hospitals are recruiting additional nurses, reconfigur­ing and adding spaces to separate a growing number of virus patients from others and, in some cases, franticall­y trying to prevent reaching capacity. Some are limiting procedures that aren’t urgent.

As of Tuesday, more than threequart­ers of the city’s 9,500 hospital beds were full, according to city figures. COVID patients are using nearly 20% of intensive care beds and more than 10% of the rest. But that’s rising rapidly.

The hospital at University of Illinois at Chicago has seen its COVID cases jump from single digits late last month to more than 60 this week, said Susan Bleasdale, UIC’s chief quality officer and an infectious disease doctor. It’s a trend she worries will continue, overtaking a spring peak when the West Side hospital recorded 90 virus cases at one point. This week, the hospital reached its capacity.

“Our hospital is packed. Our emergency room is packed,” Bleasdale said. “We hit a point where we didn’t have any beds available.”

UIC is preparing to reactivate three outdoor tents as early as next week to handle almost 40 patients as hospital officials fear they’ll run out of room. The hospital is testing as many as 800 patients a day and seeing more than 20% positivity rates, higher than the city average, she said.

“I’m worried we’re going to see a much worse wave than before,” Bleasdale said.

That also has UIC front- line workers worried about sufficient staffing to handle the influx, said Paul Pater, a UIC emergency room nurse.

“It’s worse than it was at the beginning” of the pandemic, Pater said. “And it’s only going to get worse.”

Staffing and protective gear were at the center of recent contract talks between UIC and the nurse’s union. Pater said the hospital has made assurances about the protective equipment, but he’s worried about the ability to add nurses as competitio­n for temp staff is fierce, a challenge Bleasdale acknowledg­es.

Advocate Health Care, with 10 hospitals in the city and suburbs, said Thursday it is treating almost 600 COVID- 19 patients throughout its system, which is 3 ½ times more than a month ago.

“We’re nearing the peak numbers we saw in the spring and trending significan­tly higher than the summer,” Advocate said in a statement. “Like health systems across the country, we’re facing staffing and capacity challenges.”

The hospital system announced this week that some locations may be postponing elective surgeries as it prepares for the escalation of virus cases.

City figures show Black and Latino communitie­s continue to represent a disproport­ionate percentage of all cases. Latino cases, however, are particular­ly high. On average, there are more than 640 daily confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s among Chicago’s Latinos, a number higher than Black and white cases combined, according to the city data.

Hospitals serving primarily lowincome communitie­s of color on the South and West sides expressed the greatest concern about the rising number of cases.

“We’re waiting for the next wave of this war,” said Tim Egan, CEO of Roseland Community Hospital.

The South Side hospital has eight COVID patients, half of which are in critical care. After rising cases filled more than 20% of the hospital’s 100- plus beds last spring, Roseland had no coronaviru­s patients for months, and then the rise began again in October, Egan said.

Roseland, which treats a predominan­tly Black and low- income population, has converted its lobby into a COVID care center and is seeing a large jump in drive- thru testing, he said.

Sinai Health System, which serves the South and West sides, saw cases increase about four times in just two weeks, said spokesman Dan Regan. There are about 75 cases between Mount Sinai and Holy Cross, he said.

John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County has stopped elective surgeries to free up hospital beds and is assessing other strategies, spokeswoma­n Deborah Song said.

Ramping up staffing as the case counts rise is one of the hospital’s biggest challenges, she added.

Even big hospitals cite staffing as a challenge.

Rush University Medical Center employs about 2,600 nurses, but it needs more to keep up with the increase in COVID cases, officials there say. Rush is reaching out to retirees and other sources for additional staffing.

“Without a doubt we are in a full resurgence,” said Angelique Richard, senior vice president of hospital operations.

A Rush doctor described the latest wave as a shock that happened quickly.

“It came out of nowhere,” said Dr. Meeta Shah, an emergency room physician at Rush. “All of a sudden, in a two- week span, we’re like, what happened?”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES ?? Tents for expanded emergency admittance at the University of Illinois at Chicago hospital.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES Tents for expanded emergency admittance at the University of Illinois at Chicago hospital.

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