Shelby Daily Globe

Governor Dewine provides update on COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and Ohio National Guard deployment

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(COLUMBUS, Ohio)— Ohio Governor Mike Dewine announced today that he has ordered the mobilizati­on of an additional 1,250 members of the Ohio National Guard to support hospitals with the most critical needs across the state. The mobilizati­on comes on the same day the state set an all-time high for the total number of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations during the pandemic.

The Ohio Hospital Associatio­n reported today that 5,356 people are currently hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19. One in four patients are COVID-19 positive. This surpasses the previous hospitaliz­ations record of 5,308 on Dec. 15, 2020. Of today's hospitaliz­ations, 1,228 patients are in the ICU, which is approachin­g the record high of 1,318 ICU patients reported on Dec. 15, 2020.

Ohio National Guard Deployment

As hospitals struggle with staffing to support the surge in COVID-19 patients, Governor Dewine announced during a press conference today, that he has asked Major General John C. Harris, Jr., Adjutant General, Ohio National Guard, to mobilize an additional 1,250 members of the Ohio National Guard, bringing the total deployment of National Guard members working with Ohio's healthcare systems to 2,300 members.

“This is not something we take lightly... We are asking them to leave their families, their jobs and homes. This is a huge sacrifice,” Governor Dewine said.

Governor Dewine previously authorized the deployment of 1,050 Ohio National Guard members on Friday, Dec. 17. Major General Harris said the Ohio National Guard's goal is to augment hospitals' medical staff and wraparound services. Teams including nurses and medics will provide clinical care and non-medical teams will offer support services such as food service, patient transporta­tion within facilities, and administra­tive support.

Approximat­ely 460 Guard members are deployed in the Cleveland area; more than 160 in the Toledo area; about 100 in Columbus area. Smaller numbers of the Guard will be deployed in the coming days in Mansfield, Dayton, and Lima to support hospitals. Guard personnel are also supporting testing sites in Cleveland and Akron.

“The National Guard has been indispensa­ble,” said Robert Wyllie, MD, Chief Medical Operations Officer, Cleveland Clinic.

The Ohio Department of Health and the Ohio Hospital Associatio­n are working daily with Ohio hospitals to assess staffing needs to determine the most appropriat­e support from the Ohio National Guard.

“Everybody agreed when the decision was made to send in the National Guard to our hospitals … All the way through this, we are going to be guided by where they are needed most today. It should give people confidence that everybody is on the same page here. Let's deploy them where they are needed the most,” Governor Dewine said. Hospitals

Hospitals have been taking extraordin­ary measures to manage this COVID-19 surge, including postponing elective surgeries, while battling staffing shortages as a result of COVID-19 infection or exposure, and burnout.

The northern parts of Ohio have been particular­ly hard hit, especially the greater Cleveland area, where one in three patients are COVID-19 positive, including ICU patients, according to OHA data.

“The hospital systems are under significan­t stress in Northern Ohio,” Dr. Wyllie said. “We are running 2,000 tests a day. Let me tell you about those tests: 36% of the people going into the Walker Center for testing are testing positive for COVID.”

Statewide, the COVID-19 positivity rate is 25%, according to Ohio Department of Health data.

The state's strategic hospital zone and region structure has allowed hospitals to work together with neighborin­g hospitals to balance the load of patients. This structure continues to be vital as cases and hospitaliz­ations dramatical­ly rise statewide and staffing remains a significan­t concern.

While Southwest Ohio is not seeing the same volume of patients as northern parts of the state, Richard P. Lofgren, MD, President and Chief Executive Officer, UC Health, expressed concerns about the surge in cases making its way across the entire state during the coming weeks.

“Unfortunat­ely, the pandemic is not over … we are seeing more cases now than we have ever seen along the way,” he said. “Now, the spread of Omicron is adding fuel to

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