Hartford Courant (Sunday)

NYC care facilities ready for 2nd viral surge

- By Jim Mustian and Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK — Like battle-hardened veterans, New York City hospitals and nursing homes are bracing for a potential resurgence of coronaviru­s patients, drawing on lessons learned in the spring when the outbreak brought the nation’s largest city to its knees.

The new playbook derives from the apocalypti­c days of March and April, when testing and resources were scarce, emergency rooms overflowed, and funeral homes stacked corpses in refrigerat­ed trailers.

Those insights, however hard-won, make it far less likely that the city’s hospitals would collapse under a second wave of COVID-19, health care leaders said.

Even without a vaccine, doctors are touting increasing­ly effective coronaviru­s treatments, three-month supplies of personal protective equipment and contingenc­y staffing plans.

Similar preparatio­ns are underway at New York’s hard-hit nursing homes, which accounted for a staggering percentage of the state’s coronaviru­s deaths.

“We didn’t even have testing in February when there was so much transmissi­on,” said Dr. Mitchell Katz, head of the city’s public hospital system. “I can’t see how we’d ever have the same situation that we had in March and April, but we are preparing for that possibilit­y anyway.”

Not only has critical care improved, Katz said, but coronaviru­s patients also are generally “not getting as intense as an exposure as they once did because of the wearing of masks.” New cases also are afflicting younger people, who are less likely than older patients to need hospitaliz­ation.

“Our hospitals are still quieter than they would have been a year ago because people are avoiding care out of concerns about COVID,“Katz added. “We can have several hundred additional patients and still not be full.”

New York has recorded nearly 3 7,0 0 0 new COVID-19 infections in October and is on pace to have more than double the number of people sickened this month as fell ill in September

But so far, that increase has led to only a modest uptick in hospitaliz­ations. On average, about 45 people a day have been admitted to New York City hospitals each day in October, city statistics show, up from an average of 29 per day in September.

That compares to an average 1,600 per day during the worst two weeks of the pandemic in March and

April — a time when the state also recorded its highest daily death tolls and ambulance sirens became an ominous soundtrack to the city’s out-of-control pandemic.

Last week, by contrast, the city’s 11 public hospitals had six intubated patients — down from a peak of 960.

The relative quiet stands in stark contrast to hospitals in Europe and the Mountain West that have been increasing­ly overwhelme­d by new surges.

“The measures that were put in place seem to be working,” said Dr. Fritz Francois, chief medical officer at NYU Langone Health, alluding to widespread mask use, social distancing and authoritie­s’ focus on hot spots in pockets of the city.

“Even if we see something of a resurgence,” Francois said, “the outlook is that it’s not going to be

similar to what we experience­d in the spring.”

Still, hospitals around the city are rewriting policies and stocking up on supplies while closely monitoring fluctuatio­ns in statewide case and computer modeling to decide whether and when to activate contingenc­y plans.

The city’s public hospital system is installing new cameras and microphone­s in patient rooms to reduce exposure for nurses. NYU Langone has reduced to a matter of hours the time it needs to open a COVIDdedic­ated unit. NewYorkPre­sbyterian has stockpiled ventilator­s, even as doctors now recognize that anesthesia machines can be made to function as ventilator­s in a pinch.

“I’m very confident that with any resurgence, we could deal with it,” said Dr. Steven Corwin, chief executive officer of New York--

Presbyteri­an, which has increased its number of intensive care beds from 450 to 600.

Anxiety levels remain high at New York nursing homes, where the coronaviru­s spread rampantly for months. New York nursing homes reported 713 confirmed and suspected COVID-19 cases for the four weeks ending Oct. 11, according to federal Medicare data, up from 379 over the previous four weeks.

Seeking to head off new outbreaks, state health officials restricted visitation to nursing homes that can demonstrat­e they are “COVID-free” for 14 days, meaning no positive tests among residents or staff — a requiremen­t nursing home proprietor­s said has been exceedingl­y difficult to meet, given the coming and going of staff from the facilities.

Last week, New York banned visitation to most adult care facilities within coronaviru­s “red zones” where infection rates have ticked upward.

“The majority of nursing homes do not have adequate staffing to meet the basic clinical needs of their residents under normal circumstan­ces,” said Richard Mollot, executive director of the Long Term Care Community Coalition, a nonprofit advocacy group.

“We believe that this problem has been exacerbate­d by the pandemic, and have not heard anything of nursing homes as a whole working to address this problem in the face of current needs, no matter a second wave,” he said.

Still, like hospitals, nursing homes contend they are better poised for a potential second wave than they were the first, pointing to more widespread testing and supplies of PPE.

“Nursing homes have through hard experience learned how to keep their patients and residents and staff safe,” said Chris Laxton, executive director of The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.

Gurwin Jewish, a 460bed home on Long Island, has updated contingenc­y staffing plans for a new outbreak and is conducting in-service classes to educate staff on infection prevention measures. The home is testing 1,000 people a week and has a three-month stockpile of PPE and isolation panels it used in the spring to create a dedicated COVID unit.

Still, like other New York nursing homes, it’s operating at about 85% capacity.

“We do think that there is a hesitation by some to send their loved one to a skilled nursing facility,” said Maureen Fagan, a Gurwin Jewish spokeswoma­n. “People are afraid.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? A doctor at New York’s Bellevue Hospital demonstrat­es a device that creates an isolation room for coronaviru­s patients.
SETH WENIG/AP A doctor at New York’s Bellevue Hospital demonstrat­es a device that creates an isolation room for coronaviru­s patients.

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