Chattanooga Times Free Press

Health care experts urge vaccinatio­n

COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations, deaths continue to rise

- BY MARY FORTUNE STAFF WRITER

The rising number of hospitaliz­ations and deaths from COVID19 in the Chattanoog­a area is a needless tragedy that could have been prevented — and can still be curbed — by vaccinatio­ns, local health care experts said during a recent panel discussion.

“We know the vaccinatio­n is protective against hospitaliz­ation and death,” said Dr. Matthew Kodsi, vice president of medical affairs at CHI Memorial Hospital. “We know it’s a little less effective at preventing any disease with delta as much as it was with alpha, but we would see a drastic reduction in our hospitaliz­ations and our mortality if we had a higher percentage of the population vaccinated.”

“We never in our wildest dreams imagined that the response we’ve seen in the public would occur, and that we would be honestly right back where we started last year, if not worse.”

– DR. MATTHEW KODSI, VICE PRESIDENT OF MEDICAL AFFAIRS AT CHI MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

During the conversati­on as part of the annual Champions of Health Care recognitio­n, Kodsi joined Dr. Andrea Willis, senior vice president and chief medical officer for BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, and Dr. Charles R. Woods,

CEO and chief medical officer for Children’s Hospital at Erlanger Health System.

As the number of infected and hospitaliz­ed children grows, the impact of the virus on families is coming into sharper focus, Woods said.

“We’re seeing more children who are in the hospital that have lost a parent or a close caregiver to COVID,” he said. “It does seem to hit families harder in some ways, maybe through genetic predisposi­tion, and other factors, as well. That’s a new wrinkle that we’re dealing with that you might not expect.”

In addition to the medical challenges, the emotional and psychologi­cal strain of this protracted crisis is significan­t, he added.

“It’s compounded our typical issues of the human needs and sorrows we help address,” Woods said.

In August, 40 people died of COVID-19 in Hamilton County, a number higher than deaths over the previous four months combined. Last week, 520 people were hospitaliz­ed in the Chattanoog­a region with COVID-19. At last winter’s peak, that number was 360, Kodsi said.

Rampant misinforma­tion on social media about the safety of vaccines has created a daunting challenge for health care providers, Kodsi said.

“We never in our wildest dreams imagined that the response we’ve seen in the public would occur, and that we would be honestly right back where we started last year, if not worse,” he said.

About 46% of Hamilton County residents were fully vaccinated at the end of August, according to data from the Hamilton County Health Department.

Combating vaccine hesitancy is a critical element of health care work right now, Willis said.

“Where there are true elements of hesitancy due to mistrust of the health care arena, we do have an opportunit­y to try to address those root causes,” she said. “What we do as individual­s affects the entire community — I think we have to stress that message so much.”

Woods addressed concerns people may have about the speed with which the vaccines were developed. The science behind them is not new, and has been in developmen­t since 2003, when SARS-1 struck, he said,

“A lot of work had been done, over a decade of work in terms of developing these vaccine platforms,” he said. “These were not started from scratch in January or February 2020. There was a huge run-up to these, a lot of basic safety data looked at, and now we’ve had these doses administer­ed to many, many millions of people around the world, so we actually know more about the safety profiles of these vaccines than almost anything else this early in its use.”

As the virus continues to spread, health care providers are seeing more young, otherwise healthy people suffering serious illness, Kodsi said.

“We are seeing young adults in their 20s, 30s, 40s, in critical medical conditions that we don’t usually have in our hospital,” he said. “We are seeing this really hit a younger population with mortality, chronic illness, all sorts of medical issues and repercussi­ons of COVID that is not a normal part of the population we treat at that level in the hospital.

“If people feel they’re young and they’re healthy and it’s not going to hit them, they need to think again, unfortunat­ely,” he said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Nurse Allessandr­a Vitrano, left, and Dr. Matthew Kodsi, vice president of medical affairs at CHI Memorial, walk through a neighborho­od near East Lake Park in July. The two went door-to-door to inform residents of a block party going on in the park which offered the COVID-19 vaccines. The two also brought doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine with them to vaccinate any residents who were interested.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Nurse Allessandr­a Vitrano, left, and Dr. Matthew Kodsi, vice president of medical affairs at CHI Memorial, walk through a neighborho­od near East Lake Park in July. The two went door-to-door to inform residents of a block party going on in the park which offered the COVID-19 vaccines. The two also brought doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine with them to vaccinate any residents who were interested.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Dr. Andrea Willis, senior vice president and chief medical officer for BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, is seen in July.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Dr. Andrea Willis, senior vice president and chief medical officer for BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, is seen in July.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States