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‘Pandemic of the unvaccinated’ burdens busy US hospitals

Published:Friday | July 16, 2021 | 4:56 PM
Nurses and doctors in the CoxHealth Emergency Department in Springfield, Missouri don personal protective equipment to treat patients with COVID-19, Friday, July 16, 2021. Southwest Missouri is seeing a surge in Delta variant cases, with hospitals nearing capacity and requesting help from the state for staffing and an alternative care site. (Nathan Papes/The Springfield News-Leader via AP)

The COVID-19 comeback across the United States is putting pressure on hospitals at a time when some of them are busy just trying to catch up on surgeries and other procedures that were put on hold during the pandemic.

With the highly contagious delta variant spreading rapidly, cases in the US are up around 70% over the last week, hospital admissions have climbed about 36% and deaths rose by 26%, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

Some hospitals are reporting record or near-record patient volumes.

But even for those that aren't, this round of the pandemic is proving tougher in some ways, hospital and health officials said. Staff members are worn out, and finding travelling nurses to boost their ranks can be tough.

“I really think of it as a war and how long can you stay on the front line,” said Dr Mark Rosenberg, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians.

“And how many times do you want to go back for another tour of duty. Eventually, you just don't want to do it.”

Also, many hospitals were busy even before the surge began, dealing with a backlog of cancer screenings, operations and other procedures that were put off during the winter surge to free up space and staff members, according to health care leaders.

“Eventually you have to pay the piper, and those things have now built up,” said Dr James Lawler of the Global Center for Health Security at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.

The fear now at some hospitals is that they will have to postpone non-COVID-19 care again — and risk the potential health consequences for patients.

Dr Laura Makaroff, senior vice president for prevention and early detection for the American Cancer Society, said cancer screenings dropped during the outbreak and have yet to return to normal levels in many communities.

She warned that delays in screenings can result in cancers being detected at more advanced stages of the disease.

COVID-19 deaths and newly confirmed infections across the US are still dramatically lower than they were over the winter.

But for the first time since then, cases are rising in all 50 states.

And the nation's vaccination drive has slowed to a crawl, with only about 48% of the population fully protected.

CDC Director Dr Rochelle Walensky warned that the outbreak in the US is becoming “a pandemic of the unvaccinated” because nearly all hospital admissions and deaths are among those who hadn't been immunised.

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