Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

COVID cases rise; few ICU beds available

- Sophie Carson

Wisconsin hospitals are facing staffing shortages and a severe lack of beds in intensive care units as COVID-19 infections rise.

Fewer than 3% of ICU beds were available statewide Thursday, with several multicount­y regions reporting just one or two beds available.

In five of Wisconsin’s seven regions, — as designated by the Healthcare Emergency Readiness Coalition — three or fewer ICU beds were available.

The southeast and south-central regions, home to Milwaukee and Dane counties, were the only counties with more than a handful of open ICU beds, and even then, only about 3% to 4% are available.

The number of people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 in Wisconsin has been on a steep rise since the start of November. On Thursday, more than 1,600 people were receiving hospital care for COVID-19, a 76% increase since Nov. 1.

Gov. Tony Evers’ administra­tion on Wednesday announced it is asking the federal government for five medical reserve teams of 20 workers from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to send into health care facilities, and 60 National Guard nurses are being trained to work in state-run mental health institutio­ns.

At just over 3,000, the seven-day average for cases was down somewhat from a recent peak of about 3,800 recorded five days prior, but the metric remains at levels last seen in December 2020.

The seven-day death average on Thursday was 20. A month ago, there were an average of 13 daily deaths.

Latest COVID-19 numbers

New cases reported: 3,987

New deaths reported: 34 Number hospitaliz­ed: 1,607 (intensive care: 428); up 578 patients from a month ago

Seven-day average of daily cases: 3,024 (up 696 cases from one month ago)

Seven-day average of daily deaths: 20 (up seven deaths from one month ago)

Seven-day average positivity rate — as a share of all tests given: 10.8%

Total cases since the start of pandemic: 905,850

Total deaths: 9,298

Latest vaccine numbers

Total doses administer­ed:

7,926,050

Daily doses administer­ed: 20,710 Seven-day average of daily doses: 24,530

Total booster doses administer­ed: 1,224,201

Daily booster doses administer­ed: 17,098

Seven-day average of daily booster doses: 20,148

Residents who have received one dose: 3,452,344 (59.3% of population)

Residents who are fully vaccinated: 3,280,807 (56.3% of population)

Adults who have received one dose: 3,222,428 (70.7% of 18+ population)

Adults who are fully vaccinated: 3,065,751 (67.3% of the 18+ population)

Residents ages 12 to 15 with at least one dose: 149,467 (50.4% of age group)

Residents ages 16 to 17 with at least one dose: 80,242 (54.4% of age group)

Residents ages 18 to 24 with at least one dose: 301,464 (55.2% of age group)

Residents ages 25 to 34 with at least one dose: 444,945 (60% of age group)

Residents ages 35 to 44 with at least one dose: 477,632 (67% of age group)

Residents ages 45 to 54 with at least one dose: 482,850 (67.5% of age group)

Residents ages 55 to 64 with at least one dose: 624,018 (75.8% of age group)

Residents 65 and older with at least one dose: 891,519 (87.6% of age group)

Variant cases of concern

The state Department of Health Services, the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene and other laboratory partners regularly perform whole genome sequencing on a portion of positive tests. The numbers below do not represent the total number of variant cases.

Cases of the alpha (B.1.1.7) variant: 3,742

Cases of the beta (B.1.351) variant: 77

Cases of the delta (B.1.617.2) variant: 18,706

Cases of the gamma (P.1) variant:

306

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