Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

‘It’s much more of an endemic disease’

A look inside Florida’s hospitals as newest wave sweeps the state

- By Cindy Krischer Goodman Sun Sentinel health reporter Cindy Goodman can be reached at cgoodman@ sunsentine­l.com.

At West Boca Medical Center, Dr. Cory Harlow sees patients coming into the emergency department with many of the same symptoms they complained of during the early days of COVID-19 in Florida: pneumonia, high fever and shortness of breath,

Although Harlow no longer has to rush patients into intensive care and put them on a ventilator, he does admit them to a regular room in an area dedicated again for COVID patients.

“COVID hospitaliz­ations were trending down, and then with this strain they took a left turn,” he said.

COVID hospitaliz­ations in Florida rose 25% in the past four weeks to more than 4,400 patients as BA.5 began exerting its dominance in the state. But inside local hospitals the patients and the care they need look different in this wave than they did in the initial omicron wave that peaked in January.

The COVID floors, which are reopened in many hospitals after a spring lull, now treat two different types of patients.

The first are people whose COVID symptoms cannot be managed at home — mostly seniors over 70, with a large majority over 80, according to Florida data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Most have co-morbiditie­s such as obesity, diabetes and respirator­y conditions, but few are so sick they need intensive care. As of Friday only 7% of intensive-care beds in the state are filled with COVID patients.

Today, the general standard of care for hospitaliz­ed patients is antiviral remdesivir, along with steroids and oxygen support in some cases.

“Ventilator­s are only used

in severe cases, and they are a fraction of what they were before,” said Mark Doyle, president and chief executive officer of Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale.

Even those admitted for COVID are only staying three to four days to manage their symptoms, compared to seven or more just months ago, Doyle said.

In prior waves the majority of hospitaliz­ed patients for COVID complicati­ons were unvaccinat­ed. But in this wave even vaccines that have proved highly effective at preventing serious illness are not keeping everyone out of the hospital.

“What confuses the picture is a lot who got vaccinated and did not get their booster,” said Harlow, with West Boca Medical Center. “When you are a year out, the protective effect is significan­tly degraded.

“It’s less clear whether you are any more protected than if you are not vaccinated at all.”

The second group of patients in COVID wards are people who come to the hospitals for other procedures such as gallbladde­r removal or heart issues and test positive for coronaviru­s.

Doctors say this last group has nuances.

“Someone may have had a heart attack and we swab them and they are positive,” said Harlow. “It’s a challenge to tease it out because COVID is a risk factor for heart disease.

“It has the chicken-and-egg aspect to it: Did COVID make

their heart problem worse or did it just happen and they also have COVID?”

The COVID census at Florida hospitals is nowhere as high as it was during previous waves, particular­ly the omicron surge in January that brought a crush of patients and overwhelme­d emergency rooms. Hospital visitation policies, which had been restricted in January, have been restored at most hospitals.

At Miami’s Jackson Health System, where a high of 564 COVID patients were admitted during the January omicron wave, the current count is 135 across its five hospitals.

Dr. O’Neill J. Pyke, chief medical officer of Jackson North Center, said some signs within his health system are encouragin­g. For example, he said, “Most of our COVID patients are in the regular units, not the intensive care. I think that’s in large part because of how vaccines mitigate severe disease.”

Even admitted patients aren’t as sick as those during previous surges, he said.

“Most of those admitted to regular rooms are being monitored because of what could happen, not because of what’s already happening,” Pyke said. “They are vulnerable so we have to be cautious.”

HCA hospitals across Florida have only about 20% of the COVID patients they had during the omicron peak in January, said Dr. Jason Kelly, chief medical officer for HCA East Florida Division, which comprises 14 hospitals. He said even the COVID patients in the ICUs aren’t as sick as they had been earlier in the pandemic.

“The ICU is almost more precaution­ary for a lot of patients, where it was a necessity with omicron or delta,” Kelly said.

The country now has more tools to lessen the severity of COVID and reduce the risk of hospitaliz­ation. Beyond vaccines, antiviral drugs such as Paxlovid are being given to keep high-risk patients from getting so sick that they need to be hospitaliz­ed.

In Florida COVID deaths have declined significan­tly since March and are contained mostly to individual­s over 65, state health data shows.

“The virus is more infectious, but from what we are seeing in the hospitals it’s less virulent,” Kelly said. “It’s become a fairly mild respirator­y illness. Obviously, there are still people who get very sick, but I think it’s much more of an endemic disease.”

Still, public health experts are renewing pleas for caution — concerned that new case rates will rise when school resumes in the fall. In fact, CDC forecastin­g models show that nearly 40 states and territorie­s — including Florida — are projected to see increases in new hospitaliz­ations over the next few weeks.

For now, hospital leaders say they are balancing the summer uptick in cases, with employees falling sick with COVID-19 themselves. They are coping by shifting staff between department­s and bringing in temporary workers, but that’s a struggle they cannot afford to continue indefinite­ly.

“We are still sufficient­ly staffed to handle the latest surge,” said Doyle at Holy Cross. “But I urge anyone who feels sick to get tested, wear a mask and don’t infect others.”

 ?? JEREMIE X. MCLEOD ?? Jackson Healthcare Systems no longer has the tight precaution­s and high levels in the COVID ward as it once did. However, COVID admissions are ticking up as BA.5 makes its way through the state.
JEREMIE X. MCLEOD Jackson Healthcare Systems no longer has the tight precaution­s and high levels in the COVID ward as it once did. However, COVID admissions are ticking up as BA.5 makes its way through the state.

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