New York Post

NY HOSPS NEARING CRISIS 2.0

Retired help eyed again

- By BERNADETTE HOGAN and KATE SHEEHY

New York is dangerousl­y close to overwhelmi­ng its hospital system with new COVID-19 cases — and is preparing to recruit retired doctors and nurses to the front lines again, Gov. Cuomo said Monday.

“It’s a new phase in the war against COVID,” Cuomo added — noting that daily coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations statewide are nearly quadruple the rates from June.

Every hospital in the state must begin compiling a list of retired doctors and nurses that they can draw from because there are already staffing issues in some areas, Cuomo said.

“I am very worried about staff shortages,” he said. “I’m more concerned about the staff shortage than I am the [number of hospital] beds.

“We can build beds. We can’t create more staff,” he said. “And the staff is starting tired.”

About 30,000 health-care workers flooded New York at the height of its crisis in the spring, but now “they’re all busy,’’ Cuomo said, noting that coronaviru­s surges are occurring all across the country.

Larger hospital systems such as New York City’s H+H and Northwell Health also must begin balancing their patient loads — meaning they have to spread people among their sites so one facility isn’t overwhelme­d while another has open beds, the governor said.

In the thick of the horror on March 23, the state’s daily coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ation rate hit 3,500 — the same as Sunday, said Gareth Rhodes, special counsel to the state Department of Financial Services, at the press conference.

Cuomo said of the required patient-load balancing, “This is a mandate from the state Department of Health: You must distribute patients across your system.”

Hospitals that don’t follow the edict could face malpractic­e charges from the state.

“We lived this nightmare, we learned from this nightmare, and we’re going to correct for the lessons we learned during this nightmare,” Cuomo said.

Plans are being drawn up for regional “field hospitals” again, too, said Cuomo at the briefing — where he played Christmas music at times and showed photos of Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch.

Hospitals must come up with plans to increase their bed capacity by 50 percent, he said.

The state’s positive-test rate — which the governor has called a key indicator of worrisome surges — hit 4.57 percent Sunday, the highest since around mid-May.

The state has put a limit of 10 on even private gatherings indoors and out, although the governor said no one was ticketed over the Thanksgivi­ng weekend if they had more.

Cuomo said that while hospitaliz­ations in New York in the past didn’t all occur everywhere at the same time, so resources could be moved around as needed, “that is not the case this time.”

“It is statewide,” he said of the current hospitaliz­ation crisis. “So we will have a limited ability to bring resources from upstate to downstate as we did in the spring . . . because literally every region is dealing with a hospital issue now.”

Cuomo said local regions’ coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ation rates would now be figured in to the formula the state uses to decide whether to take lockdown measures.

New York City has seen its coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ation rate remain steady, with a 4.69 percent positive test rate Sunday — although Mayor de Blasio noted that testing had been down, likely because of the holiday.

De Blasio took part in the governor’s presser through Skype — where he claimed that recent testing overall had been strong. It was the mayor’s first appearance with Cuomo, even virtually, since June.

The governor warned that he believes the state hasn’t even begun to see the effects of Thanksgivi­ng gatherings. Those should occur in the next week or so, he said — and the numbers will likely “be big.’’

It will be more than a month before the total fallout from the holiday season, including Christmas, is known, the governor added.

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