Santa Fe New Mexican

Idaho rations health care statewide

Hospitals will provide only ‘crisis standards of care’ in state with many unvaccinat­ed residents

- By Rebecca Boone

BOISE, Idaho — Idaho public health leaders on Thursday implemente­d statewide health care rationing amid a massive increase in the number of coronaviru­s patients requiring hospitaliz­ation.

The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare made the announceme­nt after the state’s largest hospital network asked the department to allow “crisis standards of care” because the increase in COVID-19 patients has exhausted the state’s medical resources.

Approximat­ely 40 percent of Idaho’s residents are fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Only Wyoming and West Virginia have lower vaccinatio­n rates.

Crisis care standards mean that scarce resources such as ICU beds will be allotted to the patients most likely to survive. Other patients will be treated with less effective methods or, in dire cases, given pain relief and other palliative care.

“The situation is dire — we don’t have enough resources to adequately treat the patients in our hospitals, whether you are there for COVID-19 or a heart attack or because of a car accident,” Idaho Department of Welfare Director Dave Jeppesen said in statement.

He urged people to get vaccinated and wear masks indoors and in crowded outdoor settings.

“Our hospitals and health care systems need our help. The best way to end crisis standards of care is for more people to get vaccinated. It dramatical­ly reduces your chances of having to go to the hospital if you do get sick from COVID-19,” Jeppesen said.

One in every 201 Idaho residents tested positive for COVID-19 over the past week, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. The mostly rural state ranks 12th in the U.S. for newly confirmed cases per capita. More than 1,300 new coronaviru­s cases were reported Wednesday, according to the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare.

On Monday, the most recent data available from the state showed that 678 people were hospitaliz­ed statewide with coronaviru­s. Meanwhile, the number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care unit beds has stayed mostly flat for the last two weeks at 70 people each day — suggesting the state may have reached the limit of its ability to treat ICU patients.

Though all of the state’s hospitals can now ration health care resources as needed, some might not need to take that step. Each hospital will decide how to implement the crisis standards of care in its own facility, public health officials said.

Kootenai Health in the city of Coeur d’Alene was the first hospital in the state to officially enter crisis standards of care last week. At the time, Chief of Staff Dr. Robert Scoggins said some patients were being treated in a conference center that had been converted into a field hospital. Others received treatment in hallways or in converted emergency room lobbies. Urgent and elective surgeries are on hold across much of the state.

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