Baltimore Sun

COVID-19 patients overrun hospitals as virus hitting kids

- By Sudhin Thanawala and Jay Reeves

Kentucky and Texas joined a growing list of states that are seeing record numbers of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients in a surge that is overwhelmi­ng doctors and nurses and afflicting more children.

Intensive care units around the nation are packed with patients extremely ill with the coronaviru­s — even in places where hospitaliz­ations have not yet reached earlier peaks. The ICU units at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Georgia typically have room for 38 patients, and doctors and nurses may have only two or three people who are very sick, said Dr. Jyotir Mehta, medical director of the ICU.

On Wednesday, the ICU had 50 COVID-19 patients, roughly half of them relying on ventilator­s to breathe.

“I don’t think we have experience­d this much critical illness in folks, so many people sick at the same time,” Mehta said.

He said talking to family members is difficult.

“They are grasping for every hope and you’re trying to tell them, ‘Look, it’s bad,’ ” he said. “You have to tell them that your loved one is not going to make it.”

In New Mexico, top health officials warned that the state is about a week away from rationing health care. The number of coronaviru­s patients needing care at hospitals jumped more than 20% in a day.

“We’re going to have to choose who gets care and who doesn’t get care,” state Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. David Scrase warned.

In Idaho, state leaders called on residents to volunteer to help keep medical facilities operating.

Texas and Kentucky on Wednesday reported more

COVID-19 patients in their hospitals than at any other time since the pandemic began, 14,255 and 2,074, respective­ly. The Texas record is based on U.S. Department of Health and Human Services data.

At least six other states — Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Hawaii, Mississipp­i and Oregon — have already broken their hospitaliz­ation records.

In Texas, nearly 47% of the population is fully vaccinated — below the national average of almost 52% — and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has banned mask and vaccine mandates. Many counties and school districts have defied his mask ban.

In Kentucky, just under 48% of the population is fully vaccinated, and public health officials have blamed the lag in part for the state’s surge. Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s COVID-19 restrictio­ns expired in June, and the GOP-controlled legislatur­e has blocked him from issuing new mask requiremen­ts or capacity limits.

Nationwide, COVID-19 deaths are running at more than 1,100 a day, the highest level since mid-March, and new cases per day are averaging over 152,000, turning the clock back to the end of January. As of early this week, the number of

people in the hospital with the coronaviru­s was around 85,000, a level not seen since early February.

The surge is largely fueled by the highly contagious delta variant among people who are unvaccinat­ed. In areas where vaccinatio­n rates are particular­ly low, doctors have pleaded with their communitie­s to get inoculated to spare overburden­ed hospitals.

They have also sounded the alarm about the growing toll of the variant on children and young adults.

Children now make up 36% of Tennessee’s reported COVID-19 cases, marking yet another sobering milestone in the state’s battle against the virus, Health Commission­er Lisa Piercey said. She said the state had 14,000 pediatric cases in the last seven days — a 57% increase over the previous week.

In South Carolina, students will again be required to wear masks on school buses starting Monday as COVID-19 cases among children and students rise rapidly.

Nearly 30% of new cases in South Carolina in the past two weeks have been in people 20 and younger. During the same time in 2020, about 17% of cases were in children and teens, according to state officials.

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY ?? Medics prepare to transport a 2-year-old COVID-19 patient to a hospital this week in Houston. Texas reportedly had 14,255 COVID-19 patients in hospitals.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY Medics prepare to transport a 2-year-old COVID-19 patient to a hospital this week in Houston. Texas reportedly had 14,255 COVID-19 patients in hospitals.

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