Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

17 residents from UF hospital system contract COVID-19

- By Lauren E. Johnson Fresh Take Florida Florida, Fresh Take This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communicat­ions. The reporter can be reached at ljohnson@ freshtakef­lorida.co

GAINESVILL­E – At least 17 anesthesio­logist residents and a fellow at one of the premier university hospital systems in Florida contracted COVID-19 earlier this month after attending a private party together, according to hospital insiders and internal documents.

The outbreak at University of Florida Health occurred after a party at a private home, according to people familiar with the situation. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they said UF Health prohibits employees from speaking to reporters without authorizat­ion.

After the party, on July 10, Timothy E. Morey, chairman of anesthesio­logy at the University of Florida College of Medicine, emailed staff to report that the hospital system’s anesthesio­logy department had 18 positive cases of the coronaviru­s who were recovering at home.

The cases included 14 junior residents, two senior residents, a fellow and an administra­tive employee, the email said, noting that it was providing the “latest data from yesterday.” It said the anesthesio­logy department “wishes them well and a speedy return to good health.” It was unclear whether or when the employees were returning to work with patients.

The UF Health outbreak illustrate­s the difficulti­es of stemming the spread of the pandemic, when even trained health care profession­als can be sickened from a private party in Florida — one of the nation’s hot spots for the virus — after explicit warnings about the risks from social gatherings.

A copy of Morey’s email was obtained by

a news service operated by the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communicat­ions.

In response to questions, UF Health’s chief communicat­ions officer Melanie Fridl Ross said in a statement: “UF Health educates its faculty, staff and students on best practices to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 on and off-duty. Our goal is to minimize the spread of the illness on our campus and in our community, recognizin­g that it’s impossible to prevent all cases given the way pandemics naturally work.”

UF Health operates the UF Health Shands family of hospitals, UF Health Jacksonvil­le medical center and others. It includes the University of Florida colleges of dentistry, medicine, nursing, pharmacy, public health and health profession­s and veterinary medicine. Its hospitals and doctors manage more than 3 million inpatient and outpatient visits each year. The anesthesio­logy department has nearly 100 total residents, including 45 junior residents.

In his email, Morey also reminded hospital employees not to come to work sick and to wash their hands frequently. The message did not mention a party or say anything about social gatherings, such as parties.

Morey did not respond to emails and a voice message.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned earlier this month that events and gatherings can spread the virus, and health officials around the U.S. have warned specifical­ly that private parties are fueling the pandemic, especially among younger adults.

Details about the house party were not immediatel­y clear. One person described it as a going-away party for a resident, but another person described it as a party organized by second-year residents for incoming first-year residents, with roughly 20 or 30 residents who attended. The conflictin­g statements could not be resolved.

The incident also raised questions about transparen­cy in uncovering informatio­n about outbreaks among health care workers, even at a government-run health care system.

The hospital system declined to comment. In a prepared statement, and over days of communicat­ions with officials there, it said unspecifie­d state and federal privacy laws prohibit it from commenting on specific situations. “Like any business, employees on occasion get sick,” the statement from its communicat­ions office said.

A national expert in health privacy, Bradley Malin, director of the Health Informatio­n Privacy Laboratory at Vanderbilt University, said public health authoritie­s generally are permitted under federal law to confirm an outbreak among a select group of people as long as there are more than 11 people and fewer than 80% of the group who are infected. The principal law governing such disclosure­s is the U.S. Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act.

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