The Reporter (Vacaville)

As coronaviru­s surges, hospitals begin postponing elective surgeries

- By Emily Deruy

With the coronaviru­s pandemic sending more people to Bay Area emergency rooms, some local hospitals are scaling back surgeries and procedures that can wait in a bid to free up limited bed space for those who need it most.

But in a departure from earlier in the pandemic, where cancellati­ons were widespread, some hospitals are continuing outpatient procedures — meaning they can try to free up bed space but preserve a badly needed source of revenue.

As of Nov. 30, Santa Clara County’s three hospitals — O’Connor, St. Louise and Santa Clara Valley Medical Center — cancelled “all adult elective non-urgent surgeries and procedures that require post- operative admission to the hospital,” said spokesman Maury Kendall.

Outpatient procedures will continue — for now. Back in the spring, the hospitals cancelled surgeries whether they required an overnight stay or not.

Some Kaiser Permanente locations are also putting a temporary stop to some procedures.

The postponed procedures are mainly in the Sacramento Valley, although some San Jose residents are also affected. One woman at a San Jose Kaiser facility said her gallbladde­r surgery had been cancelled because of COVID-19.

“Given the impact of the coronaviru­s on health care systems, we have had sitespecif­ic cancellati­ons for a limited number of elective procedures,” the health care giant said in a statement. “This action was taken to ensure that we continue to have the resources, capacity, and staff available to care for our members and the communitie­s we serve.”

Across California, more than 9,000 people — a pandemic record — are hospitaliz­ed with confirmed or suspected coronaviru­s cases, including more than 1,000 in the Bay Area alone. Public health officials have warned that ill- advised holiday gatherings over Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas will lead to more coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations and, ultimately, deaths.

While all hospitals are keeping a close eye on coronaviru­s numbers, not all of them have chosen to scale back just yet.

“We are not cancelling or postponing any procedures at this time,” said UC San Francisco spokespers­on Kristen Bole. “However, we are watching carefully to make sure we have the capacity to manage the current pandemic surge, while also meeting the needs of the other patients who depend on us for specialty care.”

U ltimately, that may mean mov ing patients around with the help of the California Emergency Medical Services Authority, the state’s hospital triage system. Since UCSF can prov ide more specialize­d care than some smaller hospitals, the hospital might move less- critical patients to other hospitals to make room for those who require more complicate­d treatment. Earlier in the pandemic, overwhelme­d Imperial County along the Mexican border sent patients to UCSF and Stanford.

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