The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Military nurses, tests to help hard-hit farm area

- By Anita Snow

Exhausted nurses in rural Arizona send coronaviru­s patients by helicopter to Phoenix due to staff shortage.

PHOENIX » Exhausted nurses in rural Yuma, Arizona, regularly send COVID-19 patients on a long helicopter ride to Phoenix when they don’t have enough staff. The so-called winter lettuce capital of the U.S. also has lagged on coronaviru­s testing in heavily Hispanic neighborho­ods and just ran out of vaccines.

But some support is coming from military nurses and a new wave of free tests for farmworker­s and the elderly in Yuma County — the hardest-hit county in one of the hardest-hit states.

Almost everyone in Yuma County, near the borders of Mexico and California, seems to know somebody who has tested positive for COVID-19, with around 33,000 cases reported since last spring — a rate of about 14,000 per 100,000 people. Maricopa County, the largest in Arizona and home to Phoenix, has a rate of about 9,000 cases per 100,000 people.

Yuma County’s soaring numbers come as Arizona’s COVID-19 diagnosis rate ranked the worst in the U.S. over the past week, at one in every 120 people.

“It’s had a significan­t impact on the community,” said Dr. Robert Trenschel, president and CEO of Yuma Regional Medical Center, the area’s only acute care hospital. “We’re still likely to see another peak from New Year’s celebratio­ns.”

Tests in Yuma County are 20% positive, compared with about 14% for Arizona. The Arizona State Department of Health Services reported Sunday that 633 people had died in the county with a population of about 215,000

Of the 124 COVID-19 patients hospitaliz­ed as of Friday, 28 were in intensive care, according to local health statistics.

Officials at Yuma Regional Medical Center say it’s been a struggle to maintain staffing of 900 to 1,000 nurses while competing for medical workers in an overwhelme­d national health care system.

To ensure each nurse has no more than five or six patients at a time, the 406-bed Yuma hospital has transferre­d COVID-19 patients to other facilities, sometimes up to 10 a day, said Deb Anders, chief nursing officer. Transfers are usually by helicopter to Phoenix, which is 180 miles away and has the closest major hospitals, although a few have gone to Tucson in southern Arizona.

Forty Army Reserve nurses arrived this month to help at the Yuma hospital for at least a month through a Department of Defense COVID-19 support operation in hard-hit parts of the U.S. West and Midwest.

They are among several hundred military medical personnel dispatched since November to work alongside civilian health care providers treating COVID-19 patients on the Navajo Nation and in six states, according to the U.S. Army North at Fort Sam Houston in Texas.

Yuma County’s residents include seasonal laborers from California’s Salinas Valley and Mexican migrant workers with U.S. agricultur­al visas.

The hot, dry region features vast agricultur­al fields of leafy greens, alfalfa and cotton in the middle of the desert, fed by the Colorado River that meanders near Yuma’s historic downtown.

Top non-farm employers include the medical center, the Marine Corps Air Station Yuma and the U.S. Border Patrol. The county is also home to some 85,000 parttime retirees and thousands of inmates at the Yuma State Prison Complex.

At the U.S.-Mexico border, farmworker­s headed to the fields Thursday were getting hundreds of free saliva tests engineered by the Arizona State University’s Biodesign Institute through a $4.7 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. The initiative aims to improve testing in places like Yuma County, which is 60% Hispanic and thus disproport­ionately affected by the virus because of conditions like diabetes and obesity.

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 ?? CESAR NEYOY — THE YUMA SUN VIA AP ?? Staff from Campesinos goes from house to house Jan. 15 to offer free COVID-19tests on the second day of the ASU and Equality Health Foundation pilot program in San Luis, Ariz.
CESAR NEYOY — THE YUMA SUN VIA AP Staff from Campesinos goes from house to house Jan. 15 to offer free COVID-19tests on the second day of the ASU and Equality Health Foundation pilot program in San Luis, Ariz.

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