Santa Cruz Sentinel

‘Like a bathtub filling up’: Alabama is slammed by virus

- By Jay Reeves

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. >> With its dozen intensive care beds already full, Cullman Regional Medical Center began looking desperatel­y for options as more and more COVID-19 patients showed up.

Ten beds normally used for less severe cases were transforme­d into intensive care rooms, with extra IV machines brought in. Video monitors were set up to enable the staff to keep watch over patients whenever a nurse had to scurry away to care for someone else.

The patch did the job — for the time being, at least.

“We’re kind of like a bathtub that’s filling up with water and the drain is blocked,” the hospital’s chief medical officer, Dr. William Smith, said last week.

Alabama, long one of the unhealthie­st and most impoverish­ed states in America, has emerged as one of the nation’s most alarming coronaviru­s hot spots.

Its hospitals are in crisis as the virus rages out of control in a region with high rates of obesity, high blood pressure and other conditions that can make COVID-19 even more dangerous, where access to health care was limited even before the outbreak, and where public resistance to masks and other precaution­s is stubborn.

The virus has killed more than 335,000 people across the U. S., including over 4,700 in Alabama. Places such as California and Tennessee have also been hit especially hard in recent weeks.

At Cullman Regional, a midsize hospital that serves an agricultur­al area 55 miles north of Birmingham, the intensive care unit as of last week was at 180% of capacity, the highest in the state. Other hospitals are also struggling to keep up with the crush of people sickened by the virus.

While a typical patient might need ICU treatment for two or three days, Smith said, COVID-19 patients often stay two or three weeks, causing the caseload to build up.

Alabama ranked sixth on the list of states with the most new cases per capita over the past week, according to Johns Hopkins University. Alabama’s latest average positivity rate — the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus — is almost 40%, one of the highest figures in the country. And the state is seeing an average of 46 deaths per day, up from 30 on Dec. 14.

 ?? JULIE BENNETT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nurses and other medical staff make their way through the seventh floor COVID-19 unit at East Alabama Medical Center in Opelika, Ala., on Dec. 10. COVID-19 patients occupy most of the beds in ICU in addition to the noncritica­l patients on the seventh floor.
JULIE BENNETT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nurses and other medical staff make their way through the seventh floor COVID-19 unit at East Alabama Medical Center in Opelika, Ala., on Dec. 10. COVID-19 patients occupy most of the beds in ICU in addition to the noncritica­l patients on the seventh floor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States