Stamford Advocate

Out-of-state COVID patients coming to Conn. hospitals

- By Nicholas Rondinone Staff writers Jordan Fenster and Amanda Cuda contribute­d to this story.

Some Connecticu­t hospitals are accepting out-ofstate COVID patients, but the state Department of Public Health says it’s not tracking them.

The exact number of COVID patients from other states being treated at Connecticu­t hospitals remained unclear Tuesday. However, at least two major hospital networks said they have been accepting these transfers in limited circumstan­ces, but did not provide the specific number of patients.

A state Department of Public Health official said Tuesday the agency has not been receiving reports about out-of-state COVID patients being treated in Connecticu­t.

Officials from Hartford HealthCare, which runs hospitals across the state, said it operates a Care Logistics Center that allows hospitals nationwide to inquire about transferri­ng patients.

Considerin­g the surge of delta variant infections has overwhelme­d the bed capacities of some intensive care units in other parts of the country, HHC officials said the requests from out of state have recently increased.

“The Care Logistics Center has fielded dozens of calls from out-of-state hospitals,“said Beth Ciotti, vice president for care logistics. “Over the weekend, Hartford Hospital received a COVIDrelat­ed patient from a hospital out west. And has also accepted non-COVID patients from throughout the Northeast. As in any health crisis whenever possible, Hartford HealthCare answers the call for help.”

A spokespers­on for HHC said the out-of-state patient at Hartford Hospital was from Oklahoma.

Trinity Health of New England, which runs large hospitals in Hartford and Waterbury, said it also has been accepting COVID-19 patients from outside Connecticu­t to help provide adequate care for those who are seriously ill.

“As a mission-based organizati­on, we are deeply committed to serve as a healing presence to each of our patients and our community. In some cases, due to high volumes of COVID-19 patients in many parts of the country, our work to serve those in need must reach beyond our local cities, towns. In recent days and weeks, we have received and accepted requests for out-of-state patient transfers, specifical­ly for COVID-positive patients with higher critical needs,” Trinity Health of New England said in a statement.

In general, the requests have been increasing during the spike in delta variantrel­ated infections, but the overall number is relatively low, health care officials said.

“The number of requests remain low, but we will continue to serve these patients and those states/ communitie­s in need of our assistance to the best of our ability, while ensuring the safety and needs of our colleagues and our local community remain top priority,” Trinity Health said in the statement.

While some hospitals are taking out-of-state COVID-19 patients, Yale New Haven Health and Stamford Health said they are not accepting transfers.

“We are not accepting COVID-19 patient transfers from out of state. We currently have 10 COVID-19 positive inpatients, and a small number of those patients have recently traveled to other parts of the country. The majority of all of our COVID-19 positive inpatients are unvaccinat­ed,” said Dr. Asha Shah, director of infectious diseases at Stamford Health.

At Nuvance Health, which runs hospitals in Danbury, Norwalk, New Milford and Sharon, officials said they are ready to help, but have not received any requests.

“Nuvance Health hospitals are willing and prepared to help other hospitals because we are all in this together,” the health network said in a statement. “At this time, there has not been a need or any requests to accept transfer patients from out-of-state hospitals that are outside our health system due to COVID-19 capacity concerns.”

Hospital capacity has been a crucial issue since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Within weeks of the first reported case in Connecticu­t, the state’s hospitals saw capacity quickly fill up amid an influx of ill patients.

By late April 2020, there were nearly 2,000 COVID patients in Connecticu­t hospitals, but that number dropped through the summer last year. Hospitaliz­ations spiked again in late December 2020 to more than 1,200 patients, state reports show.

Numbers had again dropped through June of this year before the delta variant took hold in Connecticu­t, driving up new infections. Hospitaliz­ations rose to more than 350 patients statewide, but officials in Connecticu­t believe the high vaccinatio­n rate here spared the state the worst of what has been seen in other parts of the country where hospitals have again been overwhelme­d with new COVID-19 patients.

 ?? John Moore / Getty Images ?? Some Connecticu­t hospitals are taking COVID patients from outside the state as a spike in the delta variant infections has overwhelme­d facilities across the nation.
John Moore / Getty Images Some Connecticu­t hospitals are taking COVID patients from outside the state as a spike in the delta variant infections has overwhelme­d facilities across the nation.

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