Daily Camera (Boulder)

Polis calling for more beds

- By Meg Wingerter

Gov. Jared Polis called for the state to find 300 to 500 additional beds for hospitaliz­ed patients as new projection­s suggest the ongoing COVID-19 surge could lead Colorado to exceed its hospital capacity in December.

Current measures meant to keep people out of the hospital and to use every bed are “not going to be enough” as more and more people become severely ill from

COVID-19, Polis said Wednesday during a meeting of the Governor’s Expert Emergency Epidemic Response Committee.

New modeling discussed at the meeting showed more than 2,000 people could be hospitaliz­ed with the virus across the state by year’s end, surpassing the high point of last fall’s deadly wave.

This comes as Colorado currently is experienci­ng some of the highest rates of new COVID-19 infections and hospitaliz­ations in the nation.

Polis didn’t outline where additional hospital beds would come from, other than to say state officials would work with existing health care facilities to accommodat­e more patients rather than build field hospitals, such as the facilities set up in the early months of the pandemic that never were used.

“It’s not going to be the same, when we built thousands of beds, and they were standalone facilities,” he said. “In case the other interventi­ons are not successful, we want to make sure every Coloradan gets care.”

Cara Welch, spokeswoma­n for the Colorado Hospital Associatio­n, said some hospitals may have unused beds or areas they could convert to house patients — if they can get enough staff. However, to add 500 beds quickly, the state would probably have to use some kind of alternativ­e space, she said.

Polis also said vaccine requiremen­ts at large venues could be important in slowing the virus’ spread, but it wasn’t clear if he intended to issue a public health order, or just encourage cities to do so.

He didn’t discuss mask mandates as a possible measure to contain the virus, though the state health department did confirm the COVID-19 modeling team was assessing whether increased mask-wearing would limit new hospitaliz­ations.

More than 2,000 patients

State epidemiolo­gist Dr. Rachel Herlihy said that, as is, the state’s hospitals could potentiall­y take 2,000 to 2,200 COVID-19 patients — assuming nothing changes, such as a bad flu hitting the state or many people getting injured because of bad weather.

The latest projection­s, updated this week, show the state could get close to capacity, or exceed it, she said.

If current trends continue and the pace of vaccinatio­ns doesn’t change, 2,258 people could be hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 by Jan. 1. If threequart­ers of Colorado adults get booster shots by the end of December, the peak could be lowered to 2,082 hospitaliz­ations, Herlihy said. Increased use of monoclonal antibodies to prevent highrisk people from becoming severely ill from the virus could also reduce demand for hospital beds, she said.

The state didn’t release data about how hospitaliz­ations might change if more unvaccinat­ed people chose to get the shot, though Polis said the state wouldn’t be running out of hospital beds if more people were vaccinated. Unvaccinat­ed people are about nine times as likely to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 as people who are two weeks out from their final shot.

The previous modeling report, issued Friday, had estimated hospitaliz­ations could peak at 1,383 in late

November, if nothing changed. But the increasing trend in people becoming seriously ill accelerate­d in recent days, and Colorado exceeded that projection on Monday.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t reported 1,431 people were hospitaliz­ed with confirmed COVID-19 as of Wednesday afternoon, which was the highest number since Dec. 15. The highest point of the pandemic came on Dec. 1, at 1,847 hospitaliz­ations.

Over the last week, Colorado has had an average of about 750 beds available each day, Herlihy said.

“We’re really at an all-time low for the hospital beds that are available in the state currently,” she said.

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