Monterey Herald

Hospitals struggle to keep up

- By Brian Melley

LOS ANGELES >> California is so swamped by coronaviru­s cases that the state has ordered hospitals with room to accept patients from others that have maxed out on intensive care beds.

The public health order issued late Tuesday is the latest attempt by authoritie­s in the nation’s most populous state to confront a surge in coronaviru­s infections and hospitaliz­ations, a deteriorat­ing situation that could worsen before it gets better, as gatherings during the recent holidays possibly accelerate cases.

The order, which will last three weeks, could result in patients being shipped to Northern California from Southern California and the agricultur­al San Joaquin Valley, where 14 counties were ordered to delay nonessenti­al “and non-life threatenin­g” surgeries in order to provide beds. The directive also applies to any county where ICU capacity to treat COVID-19 patients is bottoming out.

“If we continue to see an alarming increase of COVID-19 patient admissions at hospitals statewide, some facilities may not be able to provide the critical and necessary care California­ns need, whether those patients have COVID-19 or another medical condition,” said Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, the state’s public health officer.

The order could be a bellwether for California, where officials have warned that some hospitals may have to start rationing care if the expected post-holiday surge in COVID-19 cases overwhelms the health care system.

For much of the year, the state did the right things to avoid a catastroph­e. But now the virus is raging and California remains at or near the top of the list of states with the most newly confirmed cases per capita. Even with vaccines being administer­ed, albeit slowly, it is expected to take many more weeks to quell the contagion.

Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital in Los Angeles, where patients are being housed in its former gift shop, a chapel, tents and hallways, had more COVID-19 patients on Tuesday than its total capacity.

T he hospital, which serves a largely Black and Latino population in the south part of the city, has a capacity of 131 patients but was treating 215 patients, 135 with COVID-19, said Jeff Stout, interim chief nursing and operating officer.

The hospital was emblematic of the worsening situation in Los Angeles County, the nation’s most populous with about 10 million residents. A COVID-19 surge has created a shortage of oxygen and led to a directive to ambulance crews in the county to stop transporti­ng patients they can’t revive in the field.

Dr. Marc Eckstein, medical director and emergency medical services commander of the Los Angeles Fire Department, said transporti­ng someone without a pulse gives families false hope, takes the ambulance out of service, exposes workers to COVID-19 and requires decontamin­ating the vehicle.

“To be clear, we’re not asking first responders to decide who lives and who dies,” Eckstein said. “These are people who are clinically dead.”

Los Angeles continues to see hospitaliz­ations rise day after day, setting a new record Tuesday with almost 8,000 hospitaliz­ed and more than a fifth of those in ICU. The county, which accounts for a quarter of California’s 40 million residents, has more than 40% of the state’s 27,000 coronaviru­s deaths.

Some hospitals have had to close their doors at times because they’ve become so overwhelme­d, leaving ambulances waiting up to eight hours and diverting others to different emergency rooms.

Stout said Martin Luther King hospital was finalizing its crisis standards of care, which are guidelines for rationing treatment when staff, medicine and equipment are in short supply.

“We’re not there yet,” Stout said. “Every day, every hour we’re trying to avoid going into crisis care. The ultimate goal with crisis care is never to get there.”

The state on Tuesday formally requested that 500 federal medical personnel be deployed in California to help staff hospitals and skilled nursing homes after learning that the USNS Mercy Hospital ship, which docked off Los Angeles earlier in the year for overflow patients, was in dry dock and would not be returning.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emergency medical technician­s sanitize an ambulance strecher after transporti­ng a patient at Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Emergency medical technician­s sanitize an ambulance strecher after transporti­ng a patient at Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JETHRO BOWERS — THE MENDOCINO VOICE VIA AP ?? HeAlth cAre worker directs people lined up in the Adventist HeAlth UkiAh VAlley MedicAl Center, MondAy, in UkiAh to get the ModernA COVID-19 vAccinAtio­n during An emergency vAccine drive. A power fAilure for the freezer holding the county’s rAtion of the ModernA vAccines forced the emergency distriButi­on of 850 doses of thAt vAccine.
PHOTOS BY JETHRO BOWERS — THE MENDOCINO VOICE VIA AP HeAlth cAre worker directs people lined up in the Adventist HeAlth UkiAh VAlley MedicAl Center, MondAy, in UkiAh to get the ModernA COVID-19 vAccinAtio­n during An emergency vAccine drive. A power fAilure for the freezer holding the county’s rAtion of the ModernA vAccines forced the emergency distriButi­on of 850 doses of thAt vAccine.
 ??  ?? People line up outside the Adventist HeAlth UkiAh VAlley MedicAl Center, MondAy.
People line up outside the Adventist HeAlth UkiAh VAlley MedicAl Center, MondAy.

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