Toronto Star

N.B. hospitals suspend non-urgent procedures as COVID-19 cases surge

Staff being redeployed to maintain emergency, intensive care operations

- KEVIN BISSETT

rising number of COVID-19 patients in New Brunswick has pushed hospitals into Red Alert level, permitting them to postpone non-urgent medical procedures and redeploy staff to maintain emergency operations.

Chief medical health officer Dr. Jennifer Russell reported 109 new cases of COVID-19 Tuesday, raising the number of active cases in the province to 1,092. There were 63 people hospitaliz­ed with the disease, she said, including 27 in intensive care.

“We are seeing a surge in new infections to levels that we have not experience­d at any point since the pandemic began,” Russell told reporters. Thirtytwo of the new cases reported Tuesday involved people who were fully vaccinated, she said.

“If you are unvaccinat­ed, you are 18 times more likely to become severely ill if you contract the COVID-19 virus,” she said. “I want every New Brunswicke­r to stay healthy, but there are now and will continue to be breakthrou­gh cases of COVID-19 among people who have been fully vaccinated.” New Brunswick has reported a total of 75 COVID-19-related deaths.

Hospitals in the Vitalité Health Network moved to the Red Alert level Tuesday, although the Campbellto­n Regional Hospital imposed emergency measures last week to address an in-hospital outbreak. Under a Red Alert designatio­n, hospitals are able to reduce or temporaril­y suspend services such as elective surgeries and non-urgent X-rays and scans.

“We must go to Red Alert internally so we can temporaril­y reduce or suspend non-essential services and thereby redeploy staff to maintain our emergency services and intensive care units and the care of patients with COVID-19 who are hospitaliz­ed,” Vitalité CEO Dr. France Desrosiers said in a statement last week.

Hospitals in the Horizon Health Network will do the same Wednesday, and the measures will be in place for at least two weeks.

Visits are temporaril­y suspended across all hospitals in the province.

Health Minister Dorothy Shephard said Tuesday she appreciate­d the frustratio­n among people whose surgeries have been postponed.

Shephard said it’s projected there would be a six per cent rise in hospitaliz­ations over the next week, adding that the projection­s would be much higher had the government not imposed new health orders. Last week, the government introduced what it called “circuitbre­aker” restrictio­ns in parts of the province, including Moncton, such as a ban on private indoor gatherings.

Meanwhile, Green MLA Megan Mitton called Tuesday for a formal independen­t investigat­ion into a COVID-19 outbreak at the Drew Nursing Home in Sackville, N.B. Mitton said there have been eight deaths while 29 residents and 10 staff have tested positive.

Shephard said it has been a difficult time at that nursing home, noting that while she’s not sure what answers Mitton is looking for, she’s willing to take any questions under advisement.

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