Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

ICU need surges as case count increases

- By Cindy Krischer Goodman

South Florida COVID patients are filling ICU beds at rates not seen before.

A new dashboard released by Palm Beach County Thursday reveals that only 4% of ICU beds in its 17 hospitals are available. In Broward County, only 3% of ICU beds at its 16 hospitals are available, its dashboard shows.

Across the state, the situation is just as bleak.

With COVID patients getting sicker and many on ventilator­s, only 5% of intensive care beds are open to new patients, according to the U.S. Health and Human Services data.

While ICU beds are filled with patients who need all types of care, most of them in Florida are occupied by COVID patients — 55%, which is more than double the number just four weeks ago. Nationally, about 29% of ICU beds are occupied by COVID patients, according to the U.S. Health and Human Services.

Although hospitals can convert regular beds into critical care beds, many lack the additional staff needed for patients who require a higher level of care. More Florida COVID patients, for example, are now on ventilator­s. The Florida Hospital Associatio­n reported about 17% of COVID patients are on ventilator­s as of Tuesday compared with 13% a month ago.

Hospitals report almost all of the patients in the ICU are unvaccinat­ed.

“The number of COVID patients in the ICU is increasing because patients are younger, which translates into a longer ICU stay when compared to the surge last year,” said Dr. Scott Ross, chief medical officer at Cleveland Clinic in Weston. “We are seeing patients as young as 18 needing mechanical ventilatio­n and patients in their 20s and 30s not surviving this virus. Vaccinatio­n is still our best community approach moving forward.”

Dr. Aharon Sareli, chief of critical care at Memorial Healthcare System, said patients in the ICU, particular­ly those on ventilator­s, face an uphill battle fighting the disease that shuts down their lungs.

“The overwhelmi­ng majority in the ICU are on ventilator­s,” Sareli said. “This virus causes inflammati­on in the lungs and can take a long time to heal. The longer a patient is in ICU, the more at risk they are of complicati­ons.”

Mary Mayhew, president of the Florida Hospital Associatio­n, said in a written statement that overall COVID patient counts may be stabilizin­g, but many extremely sick people are still in hospitals.

“We are not out of the woods just yet as our health care heroes continue to provide care to the patients in their extremely full hospitals and emergency department­s,” she said.

On Thursday, Palm Beach County’s new public COVID dashboard shows 155 COVID patients in Palm Beach County are on ventilator­s. It also indicates hospitals have added 259 beds to accommodat­e the flood of COVID patients and 103 new COVID patients were admitted to Palm Beach hospitals in the last 24 hours.

Palm Beach Commission­ers directed hospitals to report their COVID hospitaliz­ations under a directive after the publicly run, rural Lakeside Medical Center reached capacity on Aug. 16 and called other hospitals in the county for help. Not one could take the hospital’s overflow critical-care patients.

The dashboard reflects the numbers behind the frustratio­n that more than 70 Palm Beach County doctors expressed publicly on Monday when they gathered to urge the hesitant to get vaccinated.

“As a whole, we are all exhausted,” said Dr. Jennifer Buczyner, the stroke director at Jupiter Medical Center who organized the gathering. “We can’t sit by and watch this anymore.”

Critical care nurses are spending eight hours or more a day donned in full protective gear with only their eyes making contact with a flailing COVID patient. In between caring for patients, they tell family members how bad a toll COVID is taking on their loved ones who might have had a better outcome had they gotten a vaccine and worn a mask.

In Broward County, the number of COVID patients admitted to its 16 hospitals has fluctuated for the last seven days between 1,642 and 1,842. On Thursday, about 97 % of adult care beds were filled.

Broward hospitals continue to treat seriously ill COVID patients, with 254 of them on ventilator­s in the intensive care units.

Ross at Cleveland Clinic said even COVID patients who are not on ventilator­s often need additional oxygen to breathe. “It’s straining all hospitals in the area to maintain comfortabl­e levels of oxygen to meet the needs of our patients.”

 ?? TIMES SCOTT MCINTYRE/THE NEW YORK ?? Victor Suero, 34, is treated for COVID-19 at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on July 23.
TIMES SCOTT MCINTYRE/THE NEW YORK Victor Suero, 34, is treated for COVID-19 at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on July 23.

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