Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US hospitals report third coronaviru­s wave is now over

- Aleszu Bajak

Detailed data released this week by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services illustrate­s just how much the nation’s hospitals have recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic’s third wave.

Although more than 1,500 Americans are dying from COVID-19 every day, the new data shows COVID-19 patients comprising a smaller and smaller share of hospital admissions around the country, most drasticall­y in the West and South, regions hit hard by the disease through the holidays.

“Overall we are seeing the numbers of COVID patients in our hospitals at the lowest levels in more than a year,” said Bart Buxton, president and CEO of McLaren Health Management Group in Michigan, in an email. “We currently have fewer than 80 patients total in our 15 hospitals with SARS-CoV-2 primary diagnosis and very few of those patients are in our ICUs.”

The number of hospitals with more than half of patients infected with COVID-19 has dropped from 193 to 10 since early January. States like California, Arizona, Nevada, Georgia and South Carolina have experience­d some of the steepest drops in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations, according to the HHS data.

Intensive care units have become less strained, as well. The number of hospitals reporting ICUs at or above capacity has fallen by more than 50% since early January. There were 138 hospitals reporting full intensive care units as of March 4, down from 324 the week of Jan. 8-14 – the lowest level since the week of Nov. 6-12.

The number of hospitals reporting ICUs filled exclusivel­y with patients confirmed or suspected of having COVID-19 has fallen from 35 to four since early January.

This data, reported by more than 4,500 hospitals, does not include hospitals run by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Defense Health Agency and Indian Health Service. Figures from some small hospitals have been removed from the HHS data set.

The COVID-19 rate is the number of adult patients confirmed or suspected of being infected divided by the number of inpatient beds that would be allowed under normal limits on space and staffing.

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