Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Overstressed Hospitals Face Shortages Of Workers, Beds And Treatments
The coronavirus pandemic is rolling across America like a great crimson wave. In Illinois, the rate of new infections is so high that a group of doctors sent an urgent letter to the governor. 鈥淲e鈥檙e having to almost decide who gets treatment and who doesn鈥檛,鈥 said one of its leaders. In Ohio, the rapid spread of the virus has pushed the state health-care system to the brink. Expressing deep concern, Gov. Mike DeWine (R) vowed to enforce his statewide mask mandate and issued new restrictions on social gatherings. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 surrender to this virus. We can鈥檛 let it run wild,鈥 he said. (Fears, Achenbach and Martin, 11/11)
Imagine going to a hospital so overwhelmed, doctors and nurses with Covid-19 are allowed to keep working. Or having a heart attack and getting rushed to a hospital, only to learn there's not enough emergency care for you. These scenarios have already turned into reality. The US has more people hospitalized with Covid-19 this week than at any other point in the pandemic. (Yan, 11/11)
Hospitals across the nation face an even bigger capacity problem from the resurgent spread of Covid-19 than they did during the virus鈥檚 earlier surges this year, pandemic preparedness experts said, as the number of U.S. hospitalizations hit a new high Wednesday. The number of hospitalized Covid-19 patients reached 65,368, according to the Covid Tracking Project, passing the record set Tuesday for the highest number of hospitalizations since April. A spring surge in the Northeast pushed hospitalizations near 60,000. Hospitalizations hit a nearly identical peak again in late July, as the pandemic鈥檚 grip spread across the South and West. (Evans, 11/11)
In El Paso, Texas, a convention center has been turned into a Covid-19 field hospital and refrigerated trailers have been trucked in to store the dead because there鈥檚 no more room in the morgues. In Massachusetts, Michigan and several other states, hospitals are struggling to find enough beds for the influx of coronavirus patients and canceling elective surgeries so doctors and nurses can concentrate on Covid-19 cases. (Siemaszko, 11/11)
Wisconsin is approaching a point where its hospitals may not聽be able to save everyone who needs saving as the coronavirus continues to surge and overwhelm the state's health care system, health officials warned on Wednesday.聽"We're very close to a tipping point," Ryan Westergaard, state Department of Health Services chief medical officer, said during an event hosted by Wisconsin Health News. "This could get much worse quickly and that tipping point is when we stop being able to save everyone who gets severely ill." (Beck, 11/11)
Idaho鈥檚 unchecked spread of the coronavirus has become so overwhelming in some areas that medical care providers are struggling to even answer all the phone calls from would-be patients, a health care executive said Wednesday. Dr. David Peterman, the CEO of Primary Health Medical Group, said the company鈥檚 20 clinics normally get about 1,800 phone calls a day. But with the pandemic raging in southwestern Idaho, the clinics are now getting 3,000 calls a day. (Boone, 11/12)
The coronavirus is raging in western Michigan, the CEO of Spectrum Health said Wednesday, announcing its hospitals are nearing capacity as the number of people hospitalized with the virus has tripled in the last 20 days, affecting all age groups." We are facing some of the most daunting and demanding challenges since this pandemic began," said Spectrum Health President and CEO Tina Freese Decker. "COVID-19 is surging across our state and we are heading in the wrong direction." Of those who are hospitalized in the region, 1 in 10 are dying, she said. (Jordan Shamus, 11/11)
New Mexico soared past another daily record Wednesday, setting a new high in the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations. The state reported 481 virus patients in its hospitals, a 13% jump in just a day and the most ever recorded in the pandemic. The spike in hospitalizations comes as medical leaders warn they may have to treat patients in MASH-style units if the trend continues and invoke other crisis standards of care. (McKay, 11/11)
KHN: Listen: COVID Stresses Rural Hospitals Already 鈥楾eetering On The Brink鈥
When KHN Editor-in-Chief Elisabeth Rosenthal heard a sample of the voices that correspondent Sarah Jane Tribble brought back from her reporting trip to rural Kansas, Rosenthal said she knew the story needed to be told through audio. That鈥檚 the genesis for 鈥淣o Mercy,鈥 season one of the podcast 鈥淲here It Hurts.鈥 The series documents the fallout after Mercy Hospital closed in Fort Scott, Kansas. (11/12)