Orlando Sentinel

Hospitals rush to find beds amid likely flood of patients

- By Carla K. Johnson and Nicky Forster

SEATTLE — With her due date fast approachin­g, Kelly McCarty packed a bag with nursing tops, a robe, slippers and granola bars. Last week’s ultrasound, she said, showed “this baby is head down and ready to go.”

But the new coronaviru­s has thrown her a curveball, bouncing her and about 140 other expectant moms from their first-choice hospital to another 30 minutes away. The birth unit at the Edmonds, Washington, hospital is needed for COVID-19.

With capacity stretched thin, U.S. hospitals are rushing to find beds for a coming flood of patients, opening older closed hospitals, turning single rooms into doubles and re-purposing other medical buildings.

Louisiana is making deals with hotels to provide additional hospital beds and has converted three state parks into isolation sites for patients who can’t go home. In Seattle, Harborview Medical Center is turning a homeless shelter into a 45-bed coronaviru­s recovery center.

In New York, the city’s convention center is being turned into a temporary hospital. At Mount Sinai Morningsid­e hospital, heart surgeons, cardiologi­sts and cardiovasc­ular nurses now care for coronaviru­s patients in a converted cardiac unit. Floating hospitals from the U.S. Navy are heading to Los Angeles and, eventually, New York. Military mobile hospitals are promised to Washington state. Arizona officials are seeing if closed hospitals could be reopened.

Simple math is spurring the preparatio­n.

With total U.S. cases doubling every three days, empty intensive care unit beds, needed by an estimated 5% of the sick, will rapidly fill.

U.S. hospitals reported operating 74,000 ICU beds in 2018, with 64% filled by patients on a typical day. But available ICU beds are not evenly distribute­d, according to an Associated Press analysis of federal data on hospitals that provided a cost report to Medicare in fiscal year 2018.

The AP found more than 7 million people age 60 and older — those most at risk of severe COVID-19 illness — live in counties without ICU beds. AP included ICU beds in coronary units, surgical units and burn units in the count.

“Better to be over-prepared than react in the moment,” said Melissa Short, who directs women’s health for Seattle’s Swedish Medical Center, which is using data from China and Italy as it attempts to double its capacity to 2,000 beds.

In northern Italy, an explosion of cases swamped the hospital system. Video and photos from two Spanish hospitals showed patients, many hooked to oxygen tanks, crowding corridors and emergency rooms.

About 10 days ago, Dr. Tanya Sorensen got a call from the doctor leading the response to the virus at Washington state’s Swedish Medical Center. How could the system consolidat­e its birth services to keep healthy delivering moms away from the sick?

“It brought home the fact that we are going to be facing a huge surge of cases of COVID very soon,” said Sorensen, medical director for the hospital system’s women’s services.

Swedish’s Edmonds facility, where McCarty had planned to deliver, announced Saturday that it is closing its 7th-floor birth center temporaril­y, gaining 35 beds for the expected influx. McCarty will go instead to an affiliated hospital in Everett.

“They need more beds. If they can open up a whole floor, I understand,” said McCarty, a public schoolteac­her who is busy coaching colleagues about online learning during the state’s lockdown.

If other countries have the same experience as China, 15% to 20% of COVID-19 patients will have severe illness. About 5% could become sick enough to require intensive care.

Equipment is a challenge.

About 20% of U.S. hospitals said they didn’t have enough breathing machines for patients and 97% were reusing or otherwise conserving N95 masks, according to a survey conducted last week by hospital group purchasing organizati­on Premier.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/AP ?? Temporary buildings meant for use as a field hospital have been set up on a soccer field in Shoreline, Washington.
ELAINE THOMPSON/AP Temporary buildings meant for use as a field hospital have been set up on a soccer field in Shoreline, Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States