Lake County Record-Bee

Amid surge, hospitals hesitate to cancel nonemergen­cy surgeries

- By Samantha Young Kaiser Health News

Three months ago, the nation watched as COVID-19 patients overwhelme­d New York City’s intensive care units, forcing some of its hospitals to convert cafeterias into wards and pitch tents in parking lots.

Hospitals elsewhere prepped for a similar surge: They cleared beds, stockpiled scarce protective equipment, and — voluntaril­y or under government orders — temporaril­y canceled nonemergen­cy surgeries to save space and supplies for coronaviru­s patients.

In most places, that surge in patients never materializ­ed.

Now, coronaviru­s cases are skyrocketi­ng nationally and hospitaliz­ations are climbing at an alarming rate. But the response from hospitals is markedly different.

Most hospitals around the country are not canceling elective surgeries — nor are government officials asking them to.

Instead, hospitals say they are more prepared to handle the crush of patients because they have enough protective gear for their workers and know how to better treat coronaviru­s patients. They say they will shut down nonessenti­al procedures at hospitals based on local assessment­s of risk, but not across whole systems or states.

Some hospitals have already done so, including facilities in South Florida, Phoenix and California’s Central Valley. And in a few cases, such as in Texas and Mississipp­i, government officials have ordered hospitals to suspend elective surgeries.

Hospitals’ decisions to keep operating rooms open are being guided partly by money. Elective surgeries account for a significan­t portion of hospital revenue, and the American Hospital Associatio­n estimates that the country’s hospitals and health care systems lost $202.6 billion between March 1 and June 30.

“What we now realize is that shutting down the entire health care system in anticipati­on of a surge is not the best option,” said Carmela Coyle, president of the California Hospital Associatio­n. “It will bankrupt the health care delivery system.”

The associatio­n projects that California hospitals will lose $14.6 billion this year, of which $4.6 billion has so far been reimbursed by the federal government.

But some health care workers fear that continuing elective surgeries amid a surge puts them and their patients at risk. For instance, some nurses are still being asked to reuse protective equipment like N95 masks and gowns, even though hospitals say they have enough gear to perform elective surgeries, said Zenei Cortez, president of the National Nurses United union.

“They continue to put us at risk,” Cortez said. “They continue to look at us as if we are disposable material.”

Elective surgeries, generally speaking, are procedures that can be delayed without harming patients, such as knee replacemen­ts and cataract surgery.

At least 33 states and the District of Columbia temporaril­y banned elective surgeries this spring, and most hospitals in states that didn’t ban them, such as Georgia and California, voluntaril­y suspended them to make sure they had the beds to accommodat­e a surge of coronaviru­s patients. The U.S. surgeon general, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American College of Surgeons also recommende­d health care facilities suspend nonemergen­cy surgeries.

The suspension was always intended to be temporary, said Dr. David Hoyt, executive director of the American College of Surgeons. “When this all started, it was simply a matter of overwhelmi­ng the system,” he said.

Today, case counts are soaring after many states loosened stay-at-home orders and Americans flocked to restaurant­s, bars and backyards and met up with friends and family for graduation parties and Memorial Day celebratio­ns.

Nationally, confirmed cases of COVID-19 have topped 3 million. In California, cases are spiking, with a 52% jump in the average number of daily cases over the past 14 days, compared with the two previous weeks. Hospitaliz­ations have gone up 44%.

Governors, county supervisor­s and city councils have responded by requiring people to wear masks, shutting down bars and restaurant­s — again — and closing beaches on the July Fourth holiday weekend.

But by and large, government leaders are not calling on hospitals to proactivel­y scale back elective surgeries in preparatio­n for a surge.

“Our hospitals are telling us they feel very strongly and competent they can manage their resources,” said Holly Ward, director of marketing and communicat­ions at the Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Associatio­n. If they feel the situation warrants it, “they on their own will delay surgeries.”

In some states, like Colorado, public health orders that allowed hospitals to resume nonemergen­cy surgeries in the spring required hospitals to have a stockpile of protective equipment and extra beds that could be used to treat an influx of COVID-19 patients.

States also set up overflow sites should hospitals run out of room. In Maryland, for example, the state is using the Baltimore Convention Center as a field hospital. The state of California last week reactivate­d four “alternativ­e care sites” — including a hospital that was on the verge of closure in the San Francisco Bay Area — to take COVID-19 patients should hospitals fill up.

But the decision to reduce elective surgeries in California will not come from the state. It will be made by counties in consultati­on with hospitals, said Rodger Butler, a spokespers­on for the California Health and Human Services Agency.

The question is whether hospitals have systems in place to meet a surge in COVID-19 patients when it occurs, said Glenn Melnick, a professor of health economics at the University of Southern California.

“To some extent, elective care is good care,” Melnick said “They’re providing needed services. They are keeping the system going. They are providing employment and income.”

In Los Angeles County, more than 2,000 COVID patients are currently hospitaliz­ed, according to county data. While that number is projected to go up by a couple of hundred people over the next few weeks, hospitals believe they can accommodat­e them, said county Health Services Director Christina Ghaly. In the meantime, hospitals are preparing to bring on additional staff members if needed and informing patients who have scheduled surgeries that they could be delayed.

“There’s more patients with COVID in the hospitals than there has been at any point previously in Los Angeles County during the pandemic,” Ghaly said. “Hospitals are more prepared now for handling that volume of patients than they were previously.”

While hospitals have not stopped elective surgeries, many have not ramped up to the full schedule they had before COVID-19. And they say they are picking and choosing surgeries based on what’s happening in their area.

“We were all things COVID when it was just starting,” said Joshua Adler, executive vice president for physician services at UCSF Health. “We didn’t know what we were facing.”

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