Military doctors, nurses reinforce U.S. hospitals in fight against COVID
University Hospital in Newark, N.J., is besieged with COVID patients packing its intensive-care unit, where rooms have been improvised from plastic sheeting and staff have fallen victim to the disease. The U.S. Army is reinforcing its defenses.
Capt. Jamie Dowd, a nurse who has treated ghastly trauma in Syria and Iraq, was sent to the hospital on a 30day mission with 24 other troops to help fight the worst wave of COVID-19 cases since the deadly spring of 2020. Plucked from Fort Polk in Louisiana, Dowd last week peered out from the shadows of a room in the Newark progressive-care unit.
“We’re fighting COVID like it’s our enemy in battle,” said Dowd, standing before the officer in charge as he conducted his morning rounds. Behind her, an elderly patient lay, eyes closed, hooked up to machines that translate vital signs into an eerie melody.
Hospitals are overwhelmed and understaffed after the raging omicron variant swept the U.S. over the holidays. Though the variant doesn’t appear to cause more severe cases, it has infected more people than any other wave. As of Feb. 4, more than 2,400 people remain hospitalized for COVID across New Jersey. Though that’s a large improvement from more than 6,000 just weeks ago, it’s triple the number before Thanksgiving.
To ease the burden, the federal government last month sent military doctors, nurses and other medical personnel to hospitals across six hard-hit states that requested support. From New Mexico to Rhode Island, 1,400 troops are taking position in languishing facilities.
“When you need something done, call on the military,” President Joe Biden said at a press conference on Jan. 13.
University Hospital is New Jersey’s only public acute-care hospital, and has the state’s busiest emergency department. Twelve miles west of Manhattan, Newark is a fallen industrial giant with a resurgent downtown core, but neighborhoods beset by deprivation and disease. Of its 312,000 residents, about 27% live in poverty and 19% of those under 65 lack health insurance, according to the U.S. Census.
The community that the hospital serves is among the most vulnerable to COVID: Many are essential workers, live in close quarters or multigenerational households, have underlying conditions or qualify for Medicaid. Eight-in-10 are people of color. As a socalled “safety net” hospital, University sees patients regardless of insurance status — up to 15% receive charity care.
When COVID assailed the U.S. in April 2020, New Jersey was one of the places hit first and hardest. In University
Hospital, the dead were doubled up on stretchers and diverted from the overflowing morgue to a nearby medical school, kept cold alongside cadavers awaiting dissection. “We haven’t really had a surge like that until recently,” said the hospital’s chief executive officer, Shereef Elnahal.
Omicron tore through New Jersey after Christmas, with the weekly average of COVID cases in Essex County, which encompasses Newark, peaking Jan. 5. Elnahal knew the hospital’s own crisis was yet to come as the workers themselves absorbed the viral wave. “The key difference is that now it’s more of a staffing issue than a clinic acuity issue,” he said.
By the second week of January, one-third of the clinical staff was out sick with COVID-19 or at home caring for family. The same disease that was keeping them out of the facilities had left 150 patients bedridden within.
When Maj. Marshall Glenister arrived with his medical team on Jan. 20, University’s remaining staff greeted them in the outdated lobby with cheers. After an orientation, Glenister worked with civilian administrators to deploy the troops throughout the hospital’s hardest-hit units.
On Jan. 28, as snow began to descend, hospitalizations were also falling. Seventy-two COVID patients were bedridden, and among them, 16 were on ventilators.