The Columbus Dispatch

Rural hospitals ravaged by virus

Not enough beds, staff for soaring infections

- Ken Alltucker

In North Texas, Moore County Hospital District CEO Jeff Turner is managing more than his small rural hospital can handle.

The hospital in Dumas has space and staff for 11 coronaviru­s patients, but only three who are really sick and need intensive care. When they need lifesaving therapies Turner’s hospital can’t provide, his staff tries to find open beds at larger hospitals in Amarillo, about 50 miles to the south.

When those hospitals are full, his staff scours for space, first in Midland, Wichita Falls and Lubbock, then in Dallas, Denver, Albuquerqu­e, Oklahoma City – even Kansas City, Missouri, more than 500 miles away.

Some patients have died waiting for space at big-city hospitals. Six patients died in six days recently; two died within 24 hours last week.

“In a small town, these are our neighbors, our family members,” Turner said. “That makes it tough.”

Last spring, the coronaviru­s attacked major metro areas like New York City and Houston. This summer, it spread to suburban communitie­s and ravaged the Sunbelt.

The current wave, which has surpassed 2,000 deaths a day, frightens public health officials because it’s tearing into the frayed health care safety net of rural America.

Small hospitals, understaffed and financially vulnerable before the pandemic, are under siege as the virus runs unchecked from North Dakota to the Texas Panhandle. Many of these hospitals are in towns where people are more likely to eschew precaution­s such as masks and social distancing.

Many of the nation’s nearly 1,800 rural hospitals lack the equipment, workforce and expertise to handle a surge of COVID-19 patients. Nurses and doctors are getting sick, leaving already shortstaffed hospitals more desperate for workers.

“These rural hospitals are designed for primary care, general surgery,” said

Alan Morgan, CEO of the National Rural Health Associatio­n. “They were never designed for a global pandemic response.”

‘Begging them to take a patient’

At West River Health Services in Hettinger, North Dakota, CEO Matthew Shahan knows the state’s dire situation. North Dakota’s 108 deaths in the first week of November is a record. The percentage of positive COVID-19 tests in the state during the week ending Nov. 14 was, too, according to Johns Hopkins University.

That’s true from North Dakota to Oklahoma, a region with the highest per-capita infection rates in the nation. Cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths are on the rise.

Most people who test positive at clinics can go home, quarantine and monitor their symptoms. But those whose symptoms worsen “get incredibly sick” and need to be hospitaliz­ed, Shahan said.

Some of them are admitted to West River’s COVID wing, which has space for four patients. Others must be sent to larger hospitals in Bismarck or Fargo, or neighborin­g South Dakota, Minnesota or Montana.

Before COVID-19, “I don’t think I ever made a call to another hospital, administra­tor to administra­tor, begging them to take a patient,” Shahan said. Lately his staff has had to call seven or eight hospitals to find a bed for critically ill patients.

It’s not that the hospitals don’t want to help. Larger metro hospitals often lack ICU beds and health care workers to take on more COVID-19 patients.

Beyond caring for patients, Shahan worries about how to keep nurses and doctors safe. An emergency order signed by North Dakota’s health officer last week allows health workers who test positive but show no symptoms to keep working in COVID-19 units.

Shahan said his health system rejected the idea. He doesn’t want to risk spreading the virus to healthy nurses or other clinicians.

Expertise, equipment lacking

Most of the nation’s rural hospitals are called critical-access hospitals, and they’re licensed for up to 25 beds. Each has an average of one or two ventilator­s, and most don’t have ICU beds, said Morgan, of the National Rural Health Associatio­n.

It’s especially difficult to manage an emerging threat like COVID-19 as doctors around the world learn how to treat it and protocols shift. Large hospitals have teams of specialist­s such as infectious disease doctors, respirator­y specialist­s and critical care doctors. Rural hospitals usually don’t.

And they may not have access to cutting-edge therapies and treatments that have helped COVID-19 patients recover at academic medical centers and suburban community hospitals.

Rural hospitals long have sought to address shortages of doctors, nurses and other health care workers. These hospitals struggle financially – 17 rural hospitals have closed in 2020 and 136 over the past decade, according to the National Rural Health Associatio­n.

During the pandemic, hospitals’ finances took a hit after they cut off nonemergen­cy operations to make room for COVID-19 patients.

Next few weeks will be ‘grim’

Experts warn the nation is embarking on the most difficult phase of the pandemic. Holiday celebratio­ns over the summer spurred large gatherings across the country that were blamed for the summer spike. Gatherings at Thanksgivi­ng could fuel even more spread, especially as it gets colder and people spend more time indoors.

“The situation in the next two to four weeks is going to be grim,” said Andrew Pavia, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Utah School of Medicine. “If Thanksgivi­ng does to us the same things that Memorial Day and Labor Day (did), and people gather as we all want to do without taking precaution­s, we can see another accelerati­on going into Christmas.”

Momentum is growing in several parts of the country for tighter restrictio­ns on gatherings and masks.

Shahan said people wore masks in North Dakota in the early days of the pandemic. As restrictio­ns loosened, the state didn’t see an immediate jump in cases, and residents “just got fatigued.”

 ?? BRETT CARLSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? America's small-town hospitals aren't designed to respond to global pandemics.
BRETT CARLSEN/GETTY IMAGES America's small-town hospitals aren't designed to respond to global pandemics.

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