Enterprise-Record (Chico)

State’s new virus message: ‘Don’t share your air’

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » California’s health care system is in the throes of a coronaviru­s crisis stemming from ill-advised Thanksgivi­ng gatherings, top executives from the state’s largest hospital systems said Tuesday as they put out a “desperate call” for residents to avoid a Christmas repeat they said would overwhelm the state’s medical system.

Increasing­ly exhausted staff, many pressed into service outside their normal duties, are now attending to virus patients stacked up in hallways and conference rooms, said officials from Kaiser Permanente, Dignity Health and Sutter Health, which together cover 15 million California­ns.

The CEO of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital in Los Angeles, Dr. Elaine Batchlor, separately said patients there have spilled over into the gift shop and five tents outside the emergency department.

The officials offered what they called a “prescripti­on” for California­ns to slow the virus spread, a marketing effort dubbed “Don’t share your air.” The underlying message is to stay away from people from other households, which is what many failed to do at Thanksgivi­ng.

The state reported 32,659 newly confirmed cases Tuesday and another 653 patients were admitted to hospitals, one of the biggest one-day hospitaliz­ation jumps. A state data models predict nearly 106,000 hospitaliz­ations in a month if nothing changes. The current level is 17,843.

The officials blamed Thanksgivi­ng transmissi­ons they fear will be repeated if people gather for Christmas and New Year’s and don’t take precaution­s like wearing masks, socially distancing, staying home as much as possible and not socializin­g with others.

“We are really making a clarion and desperate call to California­ns to not repeat what happened at Thanksgivi­ng,” said Dr. Stephen Parodi, The Permanente Medical Group’s associate executive director. “Our hospital systems cannot afford to see another increase like we saw with Thanksgivi­ng.”

California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly reiterated that the state’s modeling shows some hospitals and regions of the state will be overwhelme­d in coming weeks if the current surge continues. But he said that’s not a given.

“Let’s make some choices over the next 10 days that we will never regret, because our families, our loved ones, our communitie­s will be more intact because of it,” he said.

California imposed a new regional stay-at-home order in early December that is based on ICU capacity and shuttered or restricted capacity levels for a huge swath of businesses. The state’s overall capacity or regular ICU beds had fallen to 1.4% Tuesday and for another day it was at 0% for all of Southern California and the 12-county San Joaquin Valley to the north. Many hospitals are now using emergency “surge capacity.”

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