The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What happens when your hospital’s ICU reaches or exceeds capacity?

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The latest surge in coronaviru­s cases is overwhelmi­ng many intensive care units, causing hospitals and states to run out of ICU beds in some locations.

Kentucky and Texas broke records this week for COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations, joining a handful of other states that had already reached the same milestone in recent weeks. Arkansas said it ran out of ICU beds for COVID-19 patients for the first time since the pandemic began.

Nearly 80% of the country’s ICU beds — or about 68,000 — were in use Thursday, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. And about 30% of those beds, or nearly 25,000, were filled by someone with COVID-19.

As states get hammered by the super-transmissi­ble delta variant, the surge has raised questions about what it means for individual patients in places where there are no available beds. Here are some answers:

What occurs if an ICU reaches or exceeds capacity?

A maxed-out ICU can become a staffing and logistical nightmare.

Nurses who might normally take care of one patient now must keep three or four people alive. Non-ICU staff are brought in to assist. Patients can back up in emergency rooms waiting for an ICU bed to open up. And hospitals are forced to creatively convert space into makeshift ICU units.

At Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Georgia, the crush of COVID19 patients has led to the recruitmen­t of scores of employees who don’t normally work on patient floors. They included Scott Steiner, the health system’s president and CEO.

On Sunday, Steiner helped turn COVID-19 patients on their stomachs so their ravaged lungs could possibly take in more oxygen. The maneuver can require six people, depending on a patient’s weight.

“This is all hands on deck,” Steiner said.

On some campuses, the surge has displaced beds reserved for procedures such as colonoscop­ies or carpal tunnel surgery, said Roberta Schwartz, executive vice president of the Houston Methodist hospital system, where coronaviru­s patients filled nearly half the ICU beds earlier this week. A post-operation recovery bay was turned into ICU space.

Schwartz likened an inundated ICU to a home that is overwhelme­d with overnight guests, and the host is blowing up

air mattresses to accommodat­e.

“It’s not very comfortabl­e but it works,” she said. “And a blow-up mattress is better than a sleeping bag, which is better than a tent outside.”

How does it affect patients?

Patients may have to linger in emergency rooms waiting for an ICU bed, and that spills over to other patients.

This week, some Texas hospital systems closed temporaril­y their off-site emergency rooms and sent staff to their hospitals overstretc­hed by COVID-19.

Patients who arrive at hospital emergency rooms could wait several hours — and sometimes days — to get into an already overwhelme­d ICU.

“We basically do ICU in the emergency room,” said Schwartz of Houston Methodist. “You may hold down there for 45 minutes, and you may hold for three days.”

“You’re going to get great care if you can come to one of our facilities,” Schwartz added. “But ideally you want to get people up to the appropriat­e unit as quickly as you can.”

Another impact is on people who live in rural areas, where ICUs are scarce. Fewer than 3% of ICU beds nationwide are in small rural hospitals, according to the American Hospital Associatio­n.

Requests often come into larger hospitals’ ICUs to take in transfers.

“We can’t take many of those patients because we are at capacity,” said Dr. Steppe Mette, CEO of the medical center at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. ”All of our ICUs are full. And our emergency room is full of patients needing ICUs.”

How does it affect staff?

They are increasing­ly burning out. This week in the ICUs of South Florida’s Memorial Healthcare System, staff were at one point caring for

107 COVID-19 patients who were the “sickest of the sick,” said Dr. Aharon Sareli.

Many failed to respond to steroids or other treatments. They needed ventilator­s and were facing the failure of multiple organs. Many were expected to die.

“It’s physically and emotionall­y extremely draining for the staff,” Sareli said.

Hospitals are already experienci­ng a labor shortage of nurses and other medical staff. Some staff are leaving, and those who are staying are disgruntle­d and losing compassion.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP 2021 ?? The American Hospital Associatio­n says fewer than 3% of ICU beds are in small, rural hospitals. When those units request that larger hospitals take ICU transfers, the larger ones have to deny most requests, because they’re at capacity.
GERALD HERBERT/AP 2021 The American Hospital Associatio­n says fewer than 3% of ICU beds are in small, rural hospitals. When those units request that larger hospitals take ICU transfers, the larger ones have to deny most requests, because they’re at capacity.

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