Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hospitals consider rationing care as virus cases continue to surge in California

Hospitals consider rationing care as virus cases continue to surge

- By Christophe­r Weber

LOS ANGELES — California’s overwhelme­d hospitals are setting up makeshift extra beds for coronaviru­s patients, and a handful of facilities in hard-hit Los Angeles County are drawing up emergency plans in case they have to limit how many people receive life-saving care.

The number of people hospitaliz­ed across California with confirmed COVID-19 infections is more than double the state’s previous peak, reached in July, and a state model forecasts the total could hit 75,000 patients by mid-january.

Plans for rationing care are not in place yet, but they need to be establishe­d because “the worst is yet to come,” said Los Angeles County’s health services director, Dr. Christina Ghaly.

While shipments of the vaccine are rolling out to many health care workers and nursing homes across the country, it could be months before the shots are available to the general public. Until then, four hospitals run by Los Angeles County are weighing what to do if they cannot treat everyone because of a shortage of beds or staffers.

A document recently circulated among doctors at the four hospitals proposed that instead of trying to save every life, their goal could shift to saving as many patients as possible — meaning those less likely to survive would not get the same kind of care.

“Some compromise of standard of care is unavoidabl­e; it is not that an entity, system or locale chooses to limit resources, it is that the resources are clearly not available to provide care in a regular manner,” said the document obtained by the Los Angeles Times.

Corona Regional Medical Center southeast of Los Angeles has converted an old emergency room to handle nearly double the usual number of ICU patients. It’s also using two disaster tents to triage ER patients.

The state’s ICU capacity was just 2.1 percent on Sunday. Some hospitals have canceled nonessenti­al elective surgeries, such as hip replacemen­ts, that might take up beds that could soon be needed for COVID-19 patients.

CVS and rival Walgreens started providing shots last week at some long-term care locations in Connecticu­t and Ohio, and both companies said they would expand their programs in 12 states starting this week.

Those states include Florida, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon and Vermont, CVS Health said Monday.

But with vaccinatio­ns in limited supply until spring or summer, political leaders continue to urge people to stay at home and wear masks.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has asked airlines flying into his state from the United Kingdom to make all passengers take a coronaviru­s test before they get on board. At least one airline, British Airways, has agreed, the Democrat said.

Cuomo wants the U.S. government to temporaril­y halt flights from the U.K. because of the emergence of a new strain of the virus in that country.

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