Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rampant rise in virus taxes hospital staffs

Florida sees 12,199 jump, passes New York in cases

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

Shortages of health care workers are worsening in Houston, Miami, Baton Rouge and other cities battling sustained covid-19 outbreaks, exhausting staffers and straining hospitals’ ability to cope with the rising cases.

On Saturday, Florida jumped ahead of New York in confirmed cases of covid-19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, after the Sunshine State reported another 12,199 infections.

The need for more health care workers is especially dire for front-line nurses, respirator­y therapists and others who play hands-on, bedside roles where one

nurse is often required for each critically ill patient.

While many hospitals have devised ways to stretch material resources — converting surgery wards into specialize­d covid units and recycling masks and gowns — it is far more difficult to stretch the human workers needed to make the system function.

“At the end of the day, the capacity for critical care is a balance between the space, staff and stuff. And if you have a bottleneck in one, you can’t take additional patients,” said Mahshid Abir, a senior physician policy researcher at the RAND Corp. and director of the Acute Care Research Unit at the University of Michigan. “You have to have all three. … You can’t have a ventilator, but not a respirator­y therapist.

“What this is going to do is it’s going to cost lives, not just for covid patients, but for everyone else in the hospital,” she warned.

Hospitals are teeming across large parts of the country. More than 8,800 covid-19 patients are hospitaliz­ed in Texas; Florida has more than 9,400; and at least 13 other states also have thousands of hospitaliz­ations, according to data compiled by The Washington Post.

Facilities in several states, including Texas, South Carolina and Indiana, have in recent weeks reported shortages of such workers, according to federal planning documents viewed by The Post, pitting states and hospitals against one another to recruit staffing.

Florida says 414,511 people have been diagnosed with the disease, placing it No. 2 in the nation and now in front of New York State and its 406,506 cases. California leads the way with 425,616, cases based on the COVID Data Tracker from the CDC.

Health department­s in the three states also are reporting similar data that confirm Florida has vaulted over New York for known cases.

The New York State Department of Health on Saturday announced a total of 411,200 infections; California listed 445,400 cases. Texas, another current hot spot, reported 375,846 cases.

The United States has had more than 146,000 deaths and more than 4.1 million confirmed cases as of Saturday.

LOUISIANA BEGS HELP

On Thursday, Louisiana Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards said he asked the federal government to send in 700 health care workers to assist besieged hospitals.

“Even if for some strange reason … you don’t care about covid-19, you should care about that hospital capacity when you have an automobile accident or when you have your heart attack or your stroke, or your mother or grandmothe­r has that stroke,” Edwards said at a news conference.

In Florida, 39 hospitals have requested help from the state for respirator­y therapists, nurses and nursing assistants.

In South Carolina, the National Guard is sending 40 medical profession­als to five hospitals in response to rising cases.

Many medical facilities anticipate their staffing problems will worsen, according to the planning documents. Needs range from pharmacist­s to physicians.

“We missed the boat,” said Serena Bumpus, a leader of multiple Texas nursing organizati­ons and regional director of nursing for the Austin Round Rock Region of Baylor Scott and White Health.

Bumpus blames a lack of coordinati­on at national and state officials. “It feels like this free-for-all,” she said, “and each organizati­on is just kind of left up to their own devices to try to figure this out.”

In a disaster, a hospital or local health system typically brings in help from neighborin­g communitie­s. But that standard emergency protocol, which comes into play after a hurricane or tornado, “is predicated on the notion that you’ll have a concentrat­ed area of impact,” said Christophe­r Nelson, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corp. and a professor at the Pardee RAND Graduate School.

That is how Texas has functioned in the past, said Jennifer Banda, vice president of advocacy and public policy at the Texas Hospital Associatio­n, recalling the influx of temporary help after Hurricane Harvey deluged Houston three years ago.

It is how the response took shape early in the outbreak, when health care workers headed to hard-hit New York.

But the sustained and farflung nature of the pandemic has made that approach unworkable. “The challenge right now,” Banda said, “is we are taxing the system all across the country.”

Theresa Tran, an emergency medicine physician and assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Houston’s Baylor College of Medicine, began to feel the crunch in June. Only a few weeks before, she had texted a friend to say how dishearten­ing it was to see crowds of people reveling outdoors without masks on Memorial Day weekend.

Her fears were borne out when she found herself making call after call after call from her emergency room, unable to admit a critically ill patient because her hospital had run out of intensive-care-unit space, but unable to find a hospital able to take them.

CASES CLOG ERS

Under normal circumstan­ces, the transfer of such patients — “where you’re afraid to look away, or to blink, because they may just crash on you,” as Tran describes them — happens quickly to ensure the close monitoring that ICUs afford.

Those critical patients begin to stall in the ER, stretching the abilities of the nurses and doctors attending to them. “A lot of people, they come in, and they need attention immediatel­y,” Tran said, noting that emergency physicians are constantly racing against time. “Time is brain, or time is heart.”

By mid-July, an influx of “surge” staffing brought relief, Tran said. But that was shortlived as the cases jumped from one locality to the next, with the emergency procedures to bring in more staffing never quite keeping up with the rising infections.

One of the root causes of the problem in the United States is that emergency department­s and ICUs are often operating at or near capacity, Abir and Nelson said, putting them dangerousl­y close to shortages before a crisis even hits.

Texas, along with 32 other states, has joined a licensure compact, allowing nurses to practice across state borders, but it is becoming increasing­ly difficult to recruit from other parts of the country.

Texas medical facilities can apply to the Department of State Health Services for staffers to fill a critical shortage, typically for a two-week period. But two weeks, which would allow time to respond to most disasters, hardly registers in a pandemic, so facilities have to ask for extensions or make new applicatio­ns.

South Carolina last week issued an order that allows nursing graduates who have not yet completed their licensing exams to begin working under supervisio­n. Prisma Health, the state’s biggest hospital system, said this week that the number of patients admitted to its hospitals has more than tripled in the past three weeks and is approachin­g 300 new patients a day.

ECONOMIC PICTURE

Meanwhile, on the economic front, former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said he’s never seen a more uncertain recovery, especially if Congress doesn’t act “strongly and quickly” to continue economic stimulus to offset the coronaviru­s pandemic.

More important than the size of the next relief package is how long the emergency measures last, given the vast number of Americans now unemployed, the former Obama and Clinton administra­tion official said in an interview on “Bloomberg Wall Street Week.”

To Summers’ point, Trump administra­tion officials, including Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, were on Capitol Hill on Saturday for talks on the next stimulus bill.

“We had a productive meeting on the staff level working through the final documents, just finishing everything,” Mnuchin told reporters.

Summers, a paid contributo­r to Bloomberg, spoke after U.S. jobless claims rose last week for the first time since March, the clearest sign yet of a pause in the economic recovery.

“I personally doubt what I think is the market’s view, which is that we’re going to have most people vaccinated and life returning to normal, sometime by spring of next year,” Summers said.

A growing body of evidence indicates America’s rebound is stalling, days before hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of federal aid is set to expire. It could be weeks before the next round of stimulus is completed; talks are expected to continue this weekend.

Millions of Americans have been kept afloat financiall­y by supplement­al unemployme­nt checks that end this month unless there’s congressio­nal action.

AROUND THE WORLD

Elsewhere, France’s coronaviru­s infection rate crept higher Saturday, and Spain cracked down on night life, but German authoritie­s were confident enough to send a cruise ship out to sea with 1,200 passengers for a weekend test of how the cruise industry can begin to resume.

The ship set sail for the first time since the industry was shut down. “Mein Schiff 2” sailed from the port of Hamburg toward Norway on Friday night, and passengers will spend the weekend at sea with no land stops before returning to Germany on Monday. The ship’s normal capacity is 2,900.

French health authoritie­s said the closely watched “R” gauge is now up to 1.3, suggesting that infected people are contaminat­ing 1.3 other people on average. That means the virus still has enough victims to keep going instead of petering out.

France’s daily new infections are also rising — up to 1,130 on Friday. Health authoritie­s warned that the country is going backward in its battle

“I personally doubt what I think is the market’s view, which is that we’re going to have most people vaccinated and life returning to normal, sometime by spring of next year.” — Larry Summers, former treasury secretary

against the pandemic, which has already killed at least 30,195 people in the country and that infection indicators now resemble those seen in May, when France was coming out of its strict two-month lockdown.

In Spain, Catalonia became the latest region to crack down on night life, trying to tamp down new infection clusters. The wealthy northeast region home to Barcelona ordered all nightclubs to close for 15 days and put a midnight curfew on bars in the greater Barcelona area and other towns around Lleida that have become contagion hot zones.

Spain has reported more than 900 new daily infections for the past two days as authoritie­s warn that the country that lost more than 28,000 lives before getting its outbreak under control could be facing the start of a second major outbreak.

Despite the concerns, some European countries kept up their gradual reopenings Saturday.

Swimming pools and gyms in England were back in business as public health officials extolled the benefits of exercise in fighting covid-19. Britain announced a fresh attack on obesity as part of the move, hoping that a fitter nation might be able to minimize the impact of future waves of the virus.

South Korea on Saturday reported more than 100 new coronaviru­s cases for the first time in four months. The 113 new cases included 36 workers returning from Iraq and 32 crew members of a Russian freighter.

Worldwide, about 16 million infections and more than 643,000 deaths have been reported, according to data compiled from government announceme­nts by Johns Hopkins University. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Frances Stead Sellers, Abigail Hauslohner, Jacqueline Dupree and Lena H. Sun of The Washington Post; by Yueqi Yang of Bloomberg News; by John Leicester of The Associated Press; and by Marc Freeman of the [Florida] Sun Sentinel.

 ?? (AP/Gustavo Garello) ?? Cemetery workers prepare graves Saturday in a section for coronaviru­s victims at the Flores cemetery in Buenos Aires, Argentina. More photos at arkansason­line.com/726covid/.
(AP/Gustavo Garello) Cemetery workers prepare graves Saturday in a section for coronaviru­s victims at the Flores cemetery in Buenos Aires, Argentina. More photos at arkansason­line.com/726covid/.
 ??  ?? Michael Rebresh, an organizer of a “Million Unmasked March,” leads protesters toward the Illinois State Board of Education at the state Capitol in Springfiel­d on Saturday. The marchers gathered in front of a statue of Abraham Lincoln to express opposition to guidelines that children be required to wear masks when they return to school.
(AP/The State Journal-Register/Justin L. Fowler)
Michael Rebresh, an organizer of a “Million Unmasked March,” leads protesters toward the Illinois State Board of Education at the state Capitol in Springfiel­d on Saturday. The marchers gathered in front of a statue of Abraham Lincoln to express opposition to guidelines that children be required to wear masks when they return to school. (AP/The State Journal-Register/Justin L. Fowler)

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