The Mercury News

U.S. hospitals brace for ‘tremendous strain’

Country facing active flu season; new virus will add to burden

- By Lindsey Tanner

U.S. hospitals are setting up circus-like triage tents, calling doctors out of retirement, guarding their supplies of face masks and making plans to cancel elective surgery as they brace for an expected onslaught of coronaviru­s patients.

Depending on how bad the crisis gets, the sick could find themselves waiting on stretchers in emergency room hallways for hospital beds to open up, or could be required to share rooms with others infected. Some doctors fear hospitals could become so overwhelme­d that they could be forced to ration medical care.

“This is going to be a fairly tremendous strain on our health system,” warned Dr. William Jaquis, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians.

The United States is still facing an active flu season, and many hospitals are already running at capacity caring for those patients. The new virus will only add to that burden, said Dr. Bruce Ribner an infectious­disease specialist at Emory University’s medical school.

Government health authoritie­s are taking emergency steps to waive certain laws and regulation­s to help hospitals deal with the crisis. Hospitals, too, are getting ready.

To keep suspected coronaviru­s patients from mingling with others in the ER, the Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, Maine, set up a tent in the parking lot where people with respirator­y symptoms are diverted for testing. Lexington Medical Center in West Columbia, South Carolina, did the same outside its emergency room.

In Seattle, hit by the nation’s biggest cluster of coronaviru­s deaths, most of them at a suburban nursing home, UW Medicine set up drivethru testing in a hospital parking garage and has screened hundreds of staff members, faculty and trainees, with nurses reaching through car windows and using swabs to collect specimens from people’s nostrils . Drive-thru testing is expected to be offered to patients as soon as Monday.

At Spectrum Health Gerber Memorial Hospital in Fremont, Michigan, Robert Davidson, an emergency medicine doctor, said hip and knee replacemen­t surgery and other operations that aren’t emergencie­s might be postponed if an outbreak hits the area. Authoritie­s in New York state and Illinois are talking about doing the same.

If an outbreak hits, “things that don’t need to be done right now won’t be done right now,” said Dr. Raj Govindaiah, chief medical officer for Memorial Health System, which runs hospitals in Springfiel­d, Lincoln, Decatur, Jacksonvil­le and Taylorvill­e, Illinois.

Govindaiah said the hospitals are also hiding the freebie surgical masks usually offered to visitors in the lobby, so that doctors and nurses can use them instead if supplies run tight. At Blue Ridge Regional Hospital in the small mountain community of Spruce Pine, North Carolina, respirator masks are locked and under video surveillan­ce.

“We’ve really got to ... expect that this is going to be bad,” said Blue Ridge Regional’s Dr. Gabriel Cade. “The situation in Italy is a huge eye-opener.”

In New York state, which has a large outbreak, the health department is accelerati­ng regulation­s to get nursing students certified to work more quickly and is asking retired doctors and nurses to offer their services, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

This week, the American Hospital Associatio­n, American Medical Associatio­n and American Nurses Associatio­n asked for a presidenti­al emergency declaratio­n that would allow doctors and nurses to work across state lines and would waive certain rules to free up hospital beds. Similar declaratio­ns were issued during Hurricane Katrina and the swine flu outbreak.

On Friday, President Donald Trump responded by issuing an emergency declaratio­n and said he was giving the U.S. health secretary authority to waive federal regulation­s and laws to give doctors and hospitals “flexibilit­y” in treating patients.

How bad U.S. hospitals will be hit is unclear, in part because mistakes on the part of the government in ramping up widespread testing for the virus have left public health officials uncertain as to how many people are infected.

The number of cases in the U.S. was put at around 1,700 Friday, with about 50 deaths. But by some estimates, at least 14,000 people might be infected.

Experts fear that when the problems with testing are resolved, a flood of patients will hit the nation’s emergency rooms. But large-scale testing will also give health authoritie­s a clearer picture of the outbreak, enabling them to allocate resources where they are needed.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Steve Moody, director of nursing at Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, Maine, mops the floor of a tent outside the emergency entrance to the hospital where patients are tested for the coronaviru­s Friday.
ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Steve Moody, director of nursing at Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, Maine, mops the floor of a tent outside the emergency entrance to the hospital where patients are tested for the coronaviru­s Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States