The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WORRIED HOSPITALS RACE TO GET READY Medical, state officials scramble to prepare for an overwhelmi­ng number of patients.

- By Yamil Berard yamil.berard@ajc.com Carrie Teegardin cteegardin@ajc.com

Weeks before COVID-19 claimed its first Georgian, the state’s healthcare system was already showing signs of stress and crowding.

Several metro area hospitals were planning significan­t expansions to handle spiking patient loads, while hospitals in rural areas continued to struggle under the strain of treating uninsured patients amid the closure of seven rural hospitals in recent years. In December, Atlanta hospitals faced an unexpected surge in patients from Grady Memorial Hospital after flooding from a broken water pipe forced the shutdown of three floors at the massive trauma center. Meanwhile, flu season was in full swing, pushing occupancy up at hospitals across the state.

Then, COVID-19 attacked this vulnerable system.

Georgia is now scrambling

to avoid the grim scenes that have played out in China, Italy, Spain, Seattle and New York City, as the global coronaviru­s pandemic brings a deluge of patients to hospital doors. In just three weeks, when the virus is expected to peak in Georgia, thousands of patients will likely need hospital care, and one projection says that the state will need more than double the ICU beds that it has.

It’s not the kind of disaster that Georgia authoritie­s had braced for. Experts warn that last-ditch efforts to prepare for the wave of critically ill patients may not be able to spare Georgia from heart-breaking decisions on care.

“It’s not that easy to turn this ship around and push a button and tell them to get extra capacity in such a short amount of time,’’ said Pinar Keskinocak, a Georgia Institute of Technology engineerin­g professor who advises government officials on adjusting health care systems to handle outbreaks and pandemics. “We are seeing so many gaps.”

To save lives, doctors, healthcare executives and state officials are franticall­y working to find or create space for more beds and ICU units, while securing more ventilator­s, masks, gowns and other crucial equipment and supplies. They also must find more doctors and nurses to staff overflow hospitals, medics to transport patients and backfill for healthcare workers who become infected.

But other states are competing for those same scarce supplies and health care workforce. And while most hospitals have stopped elective procedures to free up beds and the state is ordering “medical pods” that have up to 25 beds and can function like a regular hospital, 57 Georgia counties have no hospitals while 93 have no ICU beds.

That has left Georgia’s healthcare workers wondering what the worst will look like when it grips their hospital. Will they need a ventilator to save a patient but not have one? Will they be asked to care for patients without a mask, or even after testing positive? There’s a reason doctors and nurses across the nation are taking to twitter and openly talking about updating their wills and writing letters to their young children — just in case.

Adding beds

To give hospitals time to add capacity, the main hope is to slow the virus with social distancing and government mandates, such as the closures of restaurant­s. But Georgia can’t bank on those alone.

With the situation so unpredicta­ble, health care systems have to prepare for whatever hits, whenever it hits.

Piedmont Healthcare said this week it is in “an aggressive planning mode” that involves examining statistica­l projection­s from four to 12 weeks out, depending on the progressio­n of COVID-19. Every scenario comes with a contingenc­y plan.

“We are exploring every avenue that will help us expand our capabiliti­es,” said John Manasso, a Piedmont spokesman.

In one such move, on Monday it announced that its hospital in Columbus is attempting a stunning, 10-day buildout of 36 beds, including seven ICU beds, in an empty floor of a former hospital building on its campus.

Northside Hospital installed fully-equipped tents at its emergency rooms to help with triage. Floyd Medical Center in Rome, which was hit early, took over a specialty hospital that was closing. In hardhit Dougherty County, emergency management officials said they are working to add up to 60 beds at the partially-used Phoebe North facility. On Tuesday, a fifth intensive care unit was added to the main hospital. Now, the hospital has four ICUs for coronaviru­s patients, and one for patients who do not have the virus. Emory, like other hospitals, is expanding critical care services throughout its system.

The state said it is also helping to set up facilities. “The Georgia Department of Public Health and the Georgia Emergency Management Agency are working collaborat­ively to accommodat­e patient surge in hospitals statewide,” said Cody Hall, a spokesman for Gov. Brian Kemp. In addition to buying medical pods, Hall said the state is working to bring on medical equipment and healthcare workers. “Site assessment­s are taking place to determine placement for the medical pods,” he said. “Additional­ly, we are working with multiple vendors to provide additional COVID-19 general medical bed facilities.”

Many hospitals are working on contingenc­y plans for more isolation rooms, such as using operating suites.

But they may face infrastruc­ture barriers, experts say.

Over two decades, most U.S. hospitals created an infrastruc­ture focused on ambulatory patients, not large numbers who were bed-ridden, said architect George Kimmerle, of the New York-based healthcare architectu­ral design and constructi­on firm The Kimmerle Group. Another problem is that newer facilities typically aren’t equipped with the types of heating and ventilatio­n systems to avoid cross contaminat­ion between patients with the disease and those admitted for other reasons.

“We’re returning to almost another era where we have infectious diseases, and our hospitals are not scripted for this,” he said.

In crisis situations, hospitals may need to use free-standing surgery centers, hotels and dormitorie­s to hospitaliz­e non-corona virus patients and separate them from those infected, Dr. Stephen Parodi, an executive with The Permanente Medical Group, said in a teleconfer­ence last week.

On Monday, the federal government eased Medicare rules to allow hospitals to transfer non-COVID-19 patients to outside facilities.

Scouring for supplies

To equip surge facilities, authoritie­s are scouring for beds and other supplies.

“Just in the last 48 hours, the level of activity has gone up significan­tly in terms of who is preparing for what,’’ Gary Schindele, who heads a company that manufactur­es portable medical equipment, told the AJC last week.

His company, Florida-based Paladin Healthcare, has been swamped for orders of medical carts and rail systems from hospital systems all over the country. He is working with Atlanta-based supply chain operator Ferno Aviation and Military Systems to deliver thousands of respirator­s, ventilator­s and monitoring devices for critical care patients across the U.S.

Hospitals also need masks, gowns and other supplies to protect staff and patients alike

‘We’re returning to almost another era where we have infectious diseases, and our hospitals are not scripted for this.’ George Kimmerle, hospital architect, addresses how facilities are focused on ambulatory patients, not large numbers who were bed-ridden — and many cannot fully contain transmissi­on of the disease.

from infection, and right now even the governor can’t easily order what they need.

In the modern era, most hospitals and EMS providers haven’t had to stockpile masks, gowns and surgical plastic for situations that require a rapid response. Instead they relied on assurances that they could quickly order and receive shipments of supplies, many of them manufactur­ed overseas, to refresh their inventorie­s.

The coronaviru­s has upended that practice.

Now, with doctors, nurses and medics working in untenable situations without proper equipment, hospitals are turning to everything from community donations to the undergroun­d market. On Monday, Georgia Tech said that Coca-Cola Co. brought 6,000 pounds of plastic sheeting to campus so that engineers could make 50,000 plastic surgical shields. Some rural Georgia businesses, responding to a plea from Gov. Brian Kemp, shifted to making hand sanitizers and face shields. The University System of Georgia said this week it would provide dozens of ventilator­s and hundreds of thousands of pieces of personal protective equipment from its 26 colleges and universiti­es.

Other efforts are under way across the nation to buy, make and repair enough ventilator­s to save the most critically ill patients. Georgia has 2,400 ventilator­s on hand; it is not clear how many more the state may need, with many hospitals tight-lipped about where they stand.

But last week, Dr. Janet Pak Memark, director of public health for Cobb and Douglas counties, told Cobb commission­ers in a special meeting that intensive care units in the county’s two hospitals, which are operated by Wellstar, were already full, and one had more than 60 people who had either known or suspected COVID-19 infections. The two hospitals, she warned, had fewer than 50 ventilator­s on hand, and that might not be enough.

Wellstar said in a statement this week that it was not at full capacity across its system and was monitoring staffing, capacity and supply chains.

More clinicians

Medical authoritie­s everywhere have been holding strategy sessions on other ways to rapidly expand the ranks of doctors, nurses, medics and other essential workers to prepare for the surge.

Piedmont Healthcare is using a social media campaign to recruit nurses and respirator­y therapists and has implemente­d a simplified hiring process to make new hires within 24 hours. Dozens of candidates have already stepped up, said Bill Ryan, who is working on the project at Piedmont.

At Kemp’s direction, Georgia licensing boards have loosened rules in hopes of adding doctors and nurses who may be licensed in other states. Just days ago, the Georgia Department of Public Health issued an order that will allow dozens of paramedics to come out of retirement and fill vacancies in the backs of ambulances.

Healthcare systems are also calling providers out of retirement and making plans to send doctors who normally work in offices to hospitals to help handle the surge or fill in for frontline workers who will, inevitably, be sidelined by the coronaviru­s. The Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University and

Morehouse School of Medicine are among the colleges mapping out roles their students could take on.

Kemp also authorized the Georgia National Guard to help. It is sending teams to support regional coordinati­ng hospitals, and already dispatched a team that included two doctors, eight nurses, one respirator­y therapist and 29 medics to Phoebe Putney to help, as it is already overwhelme­d with patients.

Healthcare staffing companies are also getting bombarded with calls for workers.

An Atlanta-based company is getting ready to send clinicians, including nurses and respirator­y therapists, to Albany to help at the expanded facility at Pheobe Putney. “It’s obviously busy right now as you can imagine,” said Shane Jackson, president of Jackson Healthcare. “It’s been a bit crazy.”

But those efforts won’t be enough even to backfill for exhausted and ill workers at Albany’s main hospital, and a Phoebe Putney spokesman on Monday said the state still couldn’t give clear answers on how the expansion facility will be equipped and staffed.

“It doesn’t sound like the answer is imminent,” spokeswoma­n Jessica Castle said.

However Hall, one of the governor’s spokesmen, said Phoebe North should be ready to accept some patients early next week. State agencies “continue to work with Phoebe to get Phoebe North fully operationa­l as soon as possible,” Hall wrote in a prepared statement. “The ongoing constructi­on efforts and staffing process are proceeding on schedule.”

Unheeded warnings

For years, researcher­s have long warned about how difficult it would be to contain an infectious disease outbreak, and the severe consequenc­es one would have on world population­s.

One 2014 report, based on planning assumption­s by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, predicted a severe influenza pandemic in the U.S. could infect 90 million people, requiring hospitaliz­ation for almost 10 million. Almost 1.5 million would end up in intensive care units. The report also stated that sick patients likely would require twice as many ventilator­s and over 4½ times the number of hospital beds than the U.S. then had on hand.

A study last fall by the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security warned that little specific focus had been given in high level reviews to a “high impact respirator­y pathogen pandemic.” But most hospitals didn’t plan for an emergency so extreme that it would affect every hospital and won’t strain to adopt some solutions on the fly.

“We don’t extend a lot of energy or resources to things that don’t happen daily to us,” said Dr. Tom Blackwell, professor of emergency medicine at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, who has decades of experience coordinati­ng disaster relief operations. “There’s really not a lot of prospectiv­e forward-thinking about how we prepare.”

‘We don’t extend a lot of energy or resources to things that don’t happen daily to us. There’s really not a lot of prospectiv­e forwardthi­nking about how we prepare.’ Dr. Tom Blackwell, professor of emergency medicine at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, who has decades of experience coordinati­ng disaster relief operations.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? Northside Hospital technician Mamie Johnson prepares for patients in the fully-equipped tents built outside the hospital’s emergency entrance. Thousands are expected to need hospital care in the coming weeks as COVID-19 peaks in Georgia.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER Northside Hospital technician Mamie Johnson prepares for patients in the fully-equipped tents built outside the hospital’s emergency entrance. Thousands are expected to need hospital care in the coming weeks as COVID-19 peaks in Georgia.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? The newly constructe­d tents outside Northside Hospital’s emergency department is part of an effort throughout the state to create space for more beds and ICU units, while securing more ventilator­s, masks, gowns and other crucial equipment and supplies.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER The newly constructe­d tents outside Northside Hospital’s emergency department is part of an effort throughout the state to create space for more beds and ICU units, while securing more ventilator­s, masks, gowns and other crucial equipment and supplies.
 ??  ?? Grady Advanced EMT Emma Hovis, on the front line of the COVID-19 epidemic, prepares for another patient call on Monday. Healthcare executives and state officials must find more doctors and nurses to staff overflow hospitals, medics to transport patients and backfill for healthcare workers who become infected.
Grady Advanced EMT Emma Hovis, on the front line of the COVID-19 epidemic, prepares for another patient call on Monday. Healthcare executives and state officials must find more doctors and nurses to staff overflow hospitals, medics to transport patients and backfill for healthcare workers who become infected.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? A 2014 report, based on planning assumption­s by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, stated that sick patients likely would require twice as many ventilator­s and over 4½ times the number of hospital beds than the U.S. then had on hand.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER A 2014 report, based on planning assumption­s by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, stated that sick patients likely would require twice as many ventilator­s and over 4½ times the number of hospital beds than the U.S. then had on hand.
 ??  ?? Dr. Thomas Blackwell
Dr. Thomas Blackwell

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