Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Houston Hospitals Near Capacity With Unvaxxed As Tropical Storm Loomed
Local hospitals and clinics, many of which are close to capacity largely due to unvaccinated COVID-19 patients, [braced] for Tropical Storm Nicholas as it [neared] Houston Monday. Texas Children鈥檚 Hospital is no stranger to inclement weather, said Dr. Brent Kaziny, the medical director of emergency management for Texas Children's Hospital. However, the hospital faces a new set of challenges as the storm rolls in during the highest levels of pediatric COVID cases since he pandemic鈥檚 beginning. (Carballo and Gill, 9/13)
Hospitals across the U.S. have staffing shortages 鈥
The Kentucky National Guard is expanding its role in assisting hospitals during a surge of COVID-19 cases that has stressed the state鈥檚 health care infrastructure. The guard is activating 310 additional members in logistical roles to 21 hospitals across the state, the guard said in a media release. The effort began on Monday. (9/14)
Washington is facing its own COVID-19 crisis and has little capacity to help neighboring Idaho deal with an overwhelming surge of cases driven by unvaccinated people, state hospital executives and doctors said Monday. Taya Briley, executive vice president of the Washington State Hospital Association, called the situation 鈥渧ery sobering鈥 during a media briefing, saying Washington faces its worst COVID wave since the pandemic began 鈥 even before big recent events like fall fairs and a return to school. (Johnson, 9/13)
鈥淚t鈥檚 gotten to the point that we are in a crisis,鈥 said Billings Clinic CEO Dr. Scott Ellner. 鈥淭he patients we're seeing are not only sicker, they鈥檙e younger, we鈥檙e being depleted with our workforce, and we鈥檝e lost several people across health care. People are tired and incredibly frustrated. We鈥檙e worried that the public doesn鈥檛 understand.鈥 This time last year, Montana was averaging 101 new cases per day and marked the beginning of the state鈥檚 initial wave. From September to November 2020, cases increased 1,085%. From July to September 2021, cases have increased 1,514%, according to data from COVID Act Now. (Schabacker, 9/13)
Henry Ford Health System has reduced the number of patient beds due to a shortage of workers. The system cut about 7 percent, or 120 patient beds, from its five hospitals. The bulk of those lost beds are in Detroit and Jackson, Adnan Munkarah, the system's chief clinical officer, said Monday in a call with reporters. The loss of beds is a blow to the system as its hospitalization rate continues to rise while the nation battles the dangerous delta variant of COVID-19. (9/13)
Anne Arundel Medical Center has started putting off some non-emergency, elective surgeries until COVID-19 admissions start to decline. COVID-19 patients are currently occupying about 10% of all the hospital beds at AAMC, and more than 70% of them are unvaccinated. "This was a very difficult decision. This was a multi-disciplinary decision made over a period of time where we were watching our numbers," said Dr. Stephen Selinger, the hospital's chief medical officer. (9/13)
The COVID-19 vaccination rollout led to influxes of patients returning to doctors this summer, but many surgeries are getting postponed again as the Delta variant spreads throughout unvaccinated areas. Medical providers are postponing orthopedic and less-severe outpatient procedures, and device companies are forecasting lower sales in the short term. (Herman, 9/14)