Albuquerque Journal

COVID-19 hospital admissions are down in 34 states

The widespread health care staffing crises may be easing

- BY JONATHAN LEVIN

U.S. hospital admissions for COVID-19 are receding in 34 states and the nation’s capital, easing the health care staffing crises that were widespread at the start of the year.

In the past week, the number of new COVID-19 patients has dropped 31% in New Jersey and in Maryland, the biggest declines in the country, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In Washington D.C., Connecticu­t and New York, the admissions declined 26% apiece.

The fast-spreading omicron variant swept across the U.S. through much of December and early January, sending cases to a weekly peak more than three times as bad as the previous worst period, last winter.

The number of infections meant that hospitals became overwhelme­d yet again, even with a variant less virulent for the average infected person.

Omicron moved so quickly that it began to burn out much quicker than previous variants, as it did in South Africa and parts of Europe.

Even among U.S. states hit later with omicron, conditions may soon improve. Oregon, Wyoming and Alaska are reporting the country’s largest increases in new hospital admissions, up 16%, 15% and 15%, respective­ly, from the previous seven-day period.

But cases, which tend to lead hospital admissions, are showing signs of peaking in those places. Emergency department visits, another leading indicator of admissions, also appeared to have crested in those areas.

In the U.S., that has all meant a sharp recovery for health care facilities, which were reporting widespread critical staffing shortages as recently as early January — a reflection not only of the number of new COVID-19 patients, but also of an exhausted workforce, many of whom caught omicron themselves.

Since Jan. 9, the number of U.S. health care facilities reporting critical staffing shortages has plummeted to the lowest since Aug. 14.

None of that means that the omicron story is over for America’s doctors and nurses.

The situation still looks dire inside intensive care units. It can take days or even weeks for a COVID infection to lead to an ICU admission, so the trend typically lags other data that focus on infections. ICU occupancy may now be cresting nationally.

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