Santa Fe New Mexican

Hospitals struggle as COVID beds fill

- By Ed White

DETROIT — Hospitals across the country are struggling to cope with burnout among doctors, nurses and other workers already buffeted by a crush of patients from the ongoing surge of the COVID-19 delta variant and now bracing for the fallout of another highly transmissi­ble mutation.

Ohio became the latest state to summon the National Guard to help overwhelme­d medical facilities. Experts in Nebraska warned that its hospitals soon may need to ration care. Medical officials in Kansas and Missouri are delaying surgeries, turning away transfers and desperatel­y trying to hire traveling nurses, as cases double and triple in an eerie reminder of last year’s holiday season.

“There is no medical school class that can prepare you for this level of death,” said Dr. Jacqueline Pflaum-Carlson, an emergency medicine specialist at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. “The hits just keep coming.”

The national seven-day average of COVID-19 hospital admissions was 60,000 by Wednesday, far off last winter’s peak but 50 percent higher than in early November, the government reported. The situation is more acute in cold-weather regions, where people are increasing­ly gathering inside and new infections are piling up.

New York state reported Friday that slightly more than 21,000 people had tested positive for COVID-19, a new high since tests became widely available. The consequenc­es were swift in New York City: The Rockettes Christmas show was scratched for the season, and some Broadway shows canceled performanc­es because of outbreaks among cast members.

“We are in a situation where we are now facing a very important delta surge and we are looking over our shoulder at an oncoming omicron surge,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to President Joe Biden, said of the two COVID-19 variants.

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