ANALYSIS: As coronavirus surge looms, field hospitals emerge across US
Issued on: 03/04/2020 - 20:46
Modified: 03/04/2020 - 23:45 GMT/ZULU
A thousand beds are being installed for sick COVID-19 patients at the TCF Center in Detroit JEFF KOWALSKY AFP/File
ADVERTISING
Washington
by Rachel Rubin and Biodun Iginla, France24 News Analysts
Convention centers, sports arenas, and parking lots from Los Angeles to Miami are being urgently converted into makeshift hospitals as authorities brace for a surge in coronavirus patients.
But another problem is already looming: a dire lack of medical staff to work in them.
For the time being, these beds are often lying empty because the peak in the number of infections is still believed to be several weeks away for many regions, excluding the likes of New York and Louisiana.
The rows and rows of beds in immense rooms invoke a sense of wartime, and a health catastrophe to come.
In New York, the convention center where Hillary Clinton held her election night party in 2016 is opening its doors to COVID-19 patients.
A Navy hospital ship, the USNS Comfort, has a thousand beds but as of Friday just 20 were occupied because the military doesn't want to treat any coronavirus patients but instead handle the overflow of other patients.
In Detroit engineers have been busy since Tuesday erecting partitions in the TCF Center, a convention hall where Bernie Sanders held a political rally in early March.
They're putting in oxygen tubes, cabling for electricity and computers, and have modified the air conditioning to ensure air doesn't escape outside.
"I've been working 15 hour days since this started," said Nick Zager, of the Army Corps of Engineers which is more often called in to help cities devastated by hurricanes or floods.
"I've never felt part of a more important mission in my life."
By the weekend they're hoping to have in place 1,000 rooms measuring ten by ten feet (three by three meters), separated by partitions, over two floors, awaiting future virus patients.
There will be 600 beds on the upper floor equipped with oxygen, and 400 on the lower floor without breathing support for patients further along in their recovery.
Plus 66 sinks, 49 showers and 23 toilets.
The facility is being financed by the federal government following a request made by the state of Michigan on Sunday.
Medical staff and equipment are the responsiblity of the local health authority.
Army engineers are already pre-planning 20 other sites in Detroit, Grand Rapids and other parts of Michigan, in case they are needed.
"I like to hope for the best and plan for the worst as an engineer," said Zager, a quote often repeated in his corps.
- Calm before the storm -
The military is building eight field hospitals in and around New York, Chicago and two other Illinois cities.
More sites in Texas and Louisiana are also planned.
In California, the state's National Guard has set up a temporary hospital in the desert environs of Indio, with 125 beds.
An RV camp hospital has been set up near the beach in Los Angeles to isolate coronavirus patients.
And hospitals are themselves expanding their capacity without waiting for public assistance.
In Virginia, just south of the capital Washington, there is a sense of a calm before the storm.
The peak of the outbreak in the state isn't set to occur until mid-May, according to modeling by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington.
The Mary Washington Hospital in Virginia's Fredericksburg has just set up an emergency room in its parking lot to double its capacity.
When France24 went there on Thursday, there was still no one there.
"I hope we never have to use it but there's no indication with a lot of the models that that's going to be the case, unfortunately," Christopher Newman, the hospital's chief medical officer told us at France24.
The hospital has doubled its number of Intensive Care Unit beds from 38 to 76, and presently has 71 ventilators.
What if the surge means capacity is exceeded by a factor of three or four? It would mean transferring patients to other hospitals, said Newman.
"My biggest concern with this is staffing," he said.
He has made arrangements with doctors from other specialties and primary care physicians to plug the gap. But, he warned, "if all the health systems are at capacity or actually double capacity in Virginia, it's going to be very difficult to have additional staff to man the field hospitals."
New York illustrates the worst case scenario for what the rest of the country may face in April or May.
"I asked the president and the military over a week ago for 1,000 nurses, 150 doctors, 300 respiratory therapists," Mayor Bill de Blasio told CNN on Friday.
"I don't have anything yet."
PROMOTED CONTENT
- The Cost of a Plumber in Minneapolis Might Surprise You! Search For Emergency…
- Sponsored by Yahoo! Search
- Is this the most competitive World War 3 strategy game?
- Sponsored by Conflict of Nations
- One Thing All Liars Have in Common, Brace Yourself
- Sponsored by TruthFinder
- French high-school students will take baccalaureate finals despite lockdown
- Grocery shopping amid the pandemic: Which protective measures should we take?
- French PM warns of ‘extremely high’ surge in country’s coronavirus cases
- The 2020 hourly rates of lawyers in Minneapolis might surprise you.
- Sponsored by Attorneys | Sponsored Listings
- 30 Strict White House Rules Melania Trump Has to Follow [Pics]
- Sponsored by Ice Pop
- This WW2 strategy game will keep you entertained for weeks!
- Sponsored by Call of War | Bytro Labs
- Powered by AMD
- Sponsored by Best Buy
- Enter your name, wait 10 seconds, then brace yourself
- Sponsored by TruthFinder
- Harry and Meghan sign off royal Instagram account
Posted by Biodun Iginla at 1:06 PM Email This
Labels: Bill de Blasio, Chicago, coronavirus, detroit, field hospitals, France24 News, new york, Rachel Rubin and Biodun Iginla, USNS Comfort, virginia
No comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)
POPULAR POSTS
- Mexican troops kill 'El Chapo' family security chief
- 28 February 2018 - 03H20 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME by Renee Celeste and Biodun Iginla, France24, Mexico City in Share ? ...
- 'Difficult' fight for Hezbollah on Lebanon-Syria border
- 26 July 2017 - 22H55 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME by Nasra Ismail and Biodun Iginla, France24, JURUD ARSAL (LEBANON) in Share ...
- Analysis: Jacob Zuma resigns
- by Susan Peterson and Biodun Iginla, Political News Analysts, The Economist Intelligence Unit, Johannesburg The disastrous legacy of Sou...
- Italy election: Polls open in unpredictable contest
- March 4, 2018 08H:12 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger Share...
- BREAKING: Interpol chief Meng Hongwei vanishes on trip to China
- October 6, 2018 09H:04 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME Share this with Facebook Share this with Messenger Share this with Twitter Sha...
- Julian Assange: Warrant for his arrest upheld by court
- 11H:37 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME 14 February 2018 Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger...
- Dagestan church shooting leaves five dead in Kizlyar
- February 18, 2018 20H:11 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger S...
- Facebook steps up facial recognition use
- December 20, 2017 15H:35 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger S...
- Brazilian inmates riot, take hostages in Rio de Janeiro prison
- February 19, 2018 00H:40 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME by Enrique Krause and Biodun Iginla, BBC News and Reuters, SAO PAULO SAO PAULO - Inmates...
- Fun facts about this year's Oscar nominees
- 04 March 2018 - 08H16 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME by Tamara Kachelmeier and Biodun Iginla, France24 Entertainment reporters, HOLLYWOOD (UNITED STAT...
FOLLOWERS
BLOG ARCHIVE
- ▼ 2020 (342)
- ▼ April (8)
- ANALYSIS: As coronavirus surge looms, field hospit...
- ANALYSIS AND BREAKING: Coronavirus: New York force...
- ANALYSIS: US deaths reaches new peak, as virus con...
- ANALYSIS: Passover on Zoom: Jewish leaders split o...
- ANALYSIS: Chinese students fleeing virus face unea...
- ANALYSIS: Coronavirus: Confirmed global cases pass...
- ANALYSIS: The hard choices covid policymakers face...
- ANALYSIS How high will unemployment in America go?...
- ? March (166)
- ? February (51)
- ? January (117)
- ? 2019 (880)
- ? 2018 (1455)
- ? 2017 (1396)
- ? 2016 (1402)
- ? 2015 (1710)
- ? 2014 (451)
- ? 2013 (215)
- ? 2012 (71)
- ? 2011 (233)
ABOUT ME
Biodun Iginla is a News Analyst for BBC News and a freelance writer and author who writes about politics and culture. He divides his time between Minneapolis, London, and Paris. He has also published 58 books, novels and nonfiction. Please see his books at amazon.com