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'I am frightened by what is coming': The struggle to keep Texas hospitals staffed as COVID-19 surges

'I am frightened by what is coming': The struggle to keep Texas hospitals staffed as COVID-19 surges
BREAKING. THIS IS WDSU NEWS AT HARD FOR STJU PROVIDERS. THEY바카라 게임 웹사이트VE BEEN AROUND SEEING THIS NOW FOR ABO AUT YEAR AND A HALF AND IT바카라 게임 웹사이트S DIFFICULT AND IT바카라 게임 웹사이트S A LOT OF PRESSURE. WELL STATEND A LOCAL HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY LOUISIANA HOSPITALS ARE EXPERIENCIN AG CRITICAL STAFFING SHORTAGE. SO HERE IN REGION 1 ONLY 90 ICU BEDS ARE AVAILABLE RIGHT NOW AND FOLLOW THAT IS CAUSING HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS TO GET CREATIVE WHEN CARING FOR PATIENTS WDSU바카라 게임 웹사이트S MORGAN LENTES LIVE ALONG JEFFERSON HIGHWAY WITH THE STORY WHO ONLY SEE ON SIX MORGAN. YEAH, LADIES SO ORVE THE PAST YEAR PEOPLE IN THE MEDICAL FIELD HAVE HAD TO LEARN TO BE REALLY FLEXIBLE. RIGHT AND THAT바카라 게임 웹사이트S TRUE HERE. AUCTIONER WHERE SOME DOCTORS ARE TAKING ON A VERY DIFFERENT ROLE. I바카라 게임 웹사이트M DOING THINGS LIKE PUTTING IN A AN IV AND DRAWING BLOOD PUTTING IN A CATHETER DR. DAVID HOUGHTON IS A NEUROLOGI,ST BUT RIGHT NOW HE바카라 게임 웹사이트S TRAINING AS A NURSE. I WAS DAVID THE MEN AND I HIT THAT WARD MY WHITE COAT CAME OFF. MY SCRUBS WENT ON AND I WAS DAVID HE IS AN EXAMPLE OF HOW AUCTIONEER IS TRYING TO CEOP WITH THE RECORD COVID HOSPITALIZATIONS. NATIONAL NURSE SHORTAGE AT THE SAME TIME LAST FRIDAY PHYSICIANS WHO WORK IN MOSTLY OUTPATIENT SEINGSTT STARTED TRAINING IN NON-COVID ICU바카라 게임 웹사이트SHE T IDEA TO BE READY IN CASE THE NURSES IN THOSE UNITS ARE NEEDED ELSEWHERE IF WE HAVE TO STRETCH EVEN FURTHER IF THE NURSESRE A BEING CALLED INTO DIFFERENT DUTIES FOR THEMSELVES. WE HAVE PHYSICIANS NOW THAT NOT ONLY ARE WILLING TO DO THIS BUT MANY OF US HAVE RECEIVED FROM TRAINING OVER THE LAST SEVERAL DAYS DOCTORS AT LCMC ARE ALSO FEELING THE EFFTSEC OF THIS FOURTH WEAV MANY ELECTIVE SURGERIES ARE BEING CANCELED THAT ALLOWS US TO FREE UP STAFF THAT MBEAY WOULD BE IN THE OPERATING ROOM OR EVEN IN SOME OF OUR CLINICS, WHICH WE바카라 게임 웹사이트RE NOW KIND OF SHIFTING SOME OF THAT TO VIRTUAL CARE TO BRING ADDITIONAL PEOPLE INTO THE HOSPITAL TO HELP WITH THAT STAFF. LOCAL LEADERS KNOW KEEPING THOSE NUMBERS WHERE THEY SHOULD BE MATTERSAK MING THE NEED TO INCRSEEA VACCINATIONS THAT MUCH MORE IMPORTANT. IN OERRD TO GET THIS DOWN AND TO PUSH THIS NEXT WAVE DOWN. WE HAVE TO START DOING THESE THINGS .AND SO JUST TO GIVE YOU AN IDEA OF HOW BAD STAFFING SHORTAGES ARE IN THE STA.TE THE ESTIMATE IS THAT THERE ARE 6,000 OPEN NURSING POSIOITNS IN LOUISIANA RIGHT NOW REPORTING LIVE LONG JEFFE
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'I am frightened by what is coming': The struggle to keep Texas hospitals staffed as COVID-19 surges
Related video above: Louisiana doctors train with nurses to help with staff shortagesWith the spread of the more dangerous and transmissible delta variant as well as lagging vaccination rates, states such as Texas are in the midst of a surge in COVID-19 cases that quickly halted a summer of reopenings.And as Texas faces another rise in hospitalizations approaching a peak witnessed during the 2020 holiday season, officials are concerned over health care worker shortages.Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced that more than 2,500 medical personnel will be deployed to hospitals around the state to care for an increasing number of COVID-19 patients."The State of Texas is taking action to ensure that our hospitals are properly staffed and supported in the fight against COVID-19," Abbott said in a news release Wednesday. Details on where the additional medical staff were coming from, or where they would be deployed, have yet to be revealed.There are only 368 ICU beds currently available throughout the state and 10,463 lab-confirmed COVID-19 patients in hospitals across the state, according to state health data Wednesday. Finding people to administer these beds is becoming increasingly difficult.Dr. Esmaeil Porsa, president and CEO of Harris Health System in Houston, told the Texas Senate Committee on Health & Human Services on Tuesday that health care employees are "tired, overworked and constantly under siege."Citing long work hours, constant exposure to COVID-19 infection, and yet another surge of patients who are generally sicker and require more attention, Porsa said staffs are reaching critical shortages that are difficult to fill."I have lost staff to fatigue and retirement," Porsa said, adding that one area hospital had 25% of its ICU beds unavailable because of staffing issues."I always see the silver lining, but I am frightened by what is coming," Porsa said.It's not just that the hospitals are full, Porsa said Thursday morning."What is concerning is the rate by which our COVID-positive patients are increasing," Porsa told CNN's Brianna Keilar. It took only five weeks for the hospital system to go from a baseline of 11 patients to its peak recently, compared to the three months it took during the winter surge, he said."If this continues to go at the rate that it is right now 바카라 게임 웹사이트 and again, I emphasize that I don't see any intervention, any mitigating interventions being put in place to try to slow this down 바카라 게임 웹사이트 this would be a disaster."Health care systems strainedBecause hospitals are filling up and there is less staff available to intake patients, a bottleneck effect is compounding ambulance availability, creating "risks for delays in emergency response to the next call in our community," Houston Fire Chief Samuel Peña said."In an EMS system as busy as Houston's, detention of EMS crews at the hospitals will result in increased response times for the entire system," Peña told CNN on Wednesday, noting that ambulance crews are waiting more than an hour at hospitals in some instances.The fire chief said strategies such as utilizing COVID-19 tents would be beneficial in relieving the bottleneck at hospital emergency departments.The Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital that set up tents to handle the overflow of patients recently had 130 patients in its waiting room, which is designed to hold at most 70, Porsa said."The idea of the tent is that as people screen positive for COVID-19, we can send them to the tent for them to continue their diagnostics and treatments until they figure out what to do with them," he said.When asked about comments he made to CNN affiliate KTRK regarding a patient left on a stretcher inside an ambulance for five and a half hours waiting for a hospital bed, Peña said the patient was a man in his 60s who was in stable condition."He was evaluated at the hospital by medical staff, including blood lab tests and X-rays, all while on our ambulance stretcher because there was no room available for the patient to be transferred to. The patient's symptoms/chief complaint resolved sometime after the physical assessment at the hospital. So for many hours he was stable and symptom-free, but still on an emergency ambulance stretcher," he said."Keeping a patient on an ambulance stretcher and an ambulance unit out of service for this long is not acceptable. This is not good for the patient, it is not good for our ambulance crews and it is not good for our community," he said.Peña says his message to the community is that anyone who can get the COVID-19 vaccine should do so immediately."The vaccine will help protect the recipient and help reduce the stress on local hospitals. People who are hesitant to get the vaccine due to any comorbidities should consult their primary care physicians for advice," the fire chief said.But because it takes weeks after inoculations to gain full immunity, Porsa said in his Senate testimony that even in the rosiest of scenarios, the surge is likely to continue in the near future and immediate measures must be taken."Even if the entire population of Texas got vaccinated today, we do not really, logically expect any impact on the numbers a month from now," Porsa said. "There is no way my hospital is going to be able to handle this. There is no way the region is going to be able to handle this."State vs. local control over masks intensifiesWhile experts say that vaccinations are the key to controlling the pandemic and lessening hospitalizations over time, other mitigating actions such as widespread mask-wearing can help stop the spread of COVID-19. Yet mandates have been fiercely rejected by Texas state leaders opposing local control and decision-making.Gov. Abbott and state Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a petition on Wednesday attempting to block a Dallas County mask mandate issued for schools and businesses.Judge Clay Jenkins' emergency order, Abbott and Paxton say, violates the governor's latest executive order on COVID-19 which says that no governmental entity, including school districts, could require mask-wearing."Attention-grabbing judges and mayors have defied executive orders before when the pandemic first started, and the courts ruled on our side 바카라 게임 웹사이트 the law. I'm confident the outcomes to any suits will side with liberty and individual choice, not mandates and government overreach," Paxton said.Abbott and Paxton's statement doesn't mention San Antonio and Bexar County, who have been granted a temporary restraining order against the governor's mask order and announced their own mask mandate, or Houston's Fort Bend County, which announced Wednesday a temporary restraining order of their own."The virus is not a political issue, and it's not an issue that we can resolve by way of ignoring it, and following GA 38 (Abbott's mask order) would have had the local officials here in Fort Bend County ignoring the virus," Fort Bend County Attorney Bridgette Smith-Lawson said after a judge granted their emergency health directive request.

Related video above: Louisiana doctors train with nurses to help with staff shortages

With the spread of the more dangerous and transmissible delta variant as well as lagging vaccination rates, states such as Texas are in the midst of a surge in COVID-19 cases that quickly halted a summer of reopenings.

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And as Texas faces another rise in hospitalizations approaching a peak witnessed during the 2020 holiday season, officials are concerned over health care worker shortages.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced that more than will be deployed to hospitals around the state to care for an increasing number of COVID-19 patients.

"The State of Texas is taking action to ensure that our hospitals are properly staffed and supported in the fight against COVID-19," Abbott said in a news release Wednesday. Details on where the additional medical staff were coming from, or where they would be deployed, have yet to be revealed.

There are only 368 ICU beds currently available throughout the state and 10,463 lab-confirmed COVID-19 patients in hospitals across the state, according to Wednesday. Finding people to administer these beds is becoming increasingly difficult.

Dr. Esmaeil Porsa, president and CEO of Harris Health System in Houston, told the Texas Senate Committee on Health & Human Services that health care employees are "tired, overworked and constantly under siege."

Citing long work hours, constant exposure to COVID-19 infection, and yet another surge of patients who are generally sicker and require more attention, Porsa said staffs are reaching critical shortages that are difficult to fill.

"I have lost staff to fatigue and retirement," Porsa said, adding that one area hospital had 25% of its ICU beds unavailable because of staffing issues.

"I always see the silver lining, but I am frightened by what is coming," Porsa said.

It's not just that the hospitals are full, Porsa said Thursday morning.

"What is concerning is the rate by which our COVID-positive patients are increasing," Porsa told CNN's Brianna Keilar. It took only five weeks for the hospital system to go from a baseline of 11 patients to its peak recently, compared to the three months it took during the winter surge, he said.

"If this continues to go at the rate that it is right now 바카라 게임 웹사이트 and again, I emphasize that I don't see any intervention, any mitigating interventions being put in place to try to slow this down 바카라 게임 웹사이트 this would be a disaster."

Health care systems strained

Because hospitals are filling up and there is less staff available to intake patients, a bottleneck effect is compounding ambulance availability, creating "risks for delays in emergency response to the next call in our community," Houston Fire Chief Samuel Peña said.

"In an EMS system as busy as Houston's, detention of EMS crews at the hospitals will result in increased response times for the entire system," Peña told CNN on Wednesday, noting that ambulance crews are waiting more than an hour at hospitals in some instances.

The fire chief said strategies such as utilizing COVID-19 tents would be beneficial in relieving the bottleneck at hospital emergency departments.

The Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital that set up tents to handle the overflow of patients recently had 130 patients in its waiting room, which is designed to hold at most 70, Porsa said.

"The idea of the tent is that as people screen positive for COVID-19, we can send them to the tent for them to continue their diagnostics and treatments until they figure out what to do with them," he said.

When asked about comments he made to regarding a patient left on a stretcher inside an ambulance for five and a half hours waiting for a hospital bed, Peña said the patient was a man in his 60s who was in stable condition.

"He was evaluated at the hospital by medical staff, including blood lab tests and X-rays, all while on our ambulance stretcher because there was no room available for the patient to be transferred to. The patient's symptoms/chief complaint resolved sometime after the physical assessment at the hospital. So for many hours he was stable and symptom-free, but still on an emergency ambulance stretcher," he said.

"Keeping a patient on an ambulance stretcher and an ambulance unit out of service for this long is not acceptable. This is not good for the patient, it is not good for our ambulance crews and it is not good for our community," he said.

Peña says his message to the community is that anyone who can get the COVID-19 vaccine should do so immediately.

"The vaccine will help protect the recipient and help reduce the stress on local hospitals. People who are hesitant to get the vaccine due to any comorbidities should consult their primary care physicians for advice," the fire chief said.

But because it takes weeks after inoculations to gain full immunity, Porsa said in his Senate testimony that even in the rosiest of scenarios, the surge is likely to continue in the near future and immediate measures must be taken.

"Even if the entire population of Texas got vaccinated today, we do not really, logically expect any impact on the numbers a month from now," Porsa said. "There is no way my hospital is going to be able to handle this. There is no way the region is going to be able to handle this."

State vs. local control over masks intensifies

While experts say that vaccinations are the key to controlling the pandemic and lessening hospitalizations over time, other mitigating actions such as widespread mask-wearing can help stop the spread of COVID-19. Yet mandates have been fiercely rejected by Texas state leaders opposing local control and decision-making.

Gov. Abbott and state Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a petition on Wednesday attempting to block a Dallas County issued for schools and businesses.

Judge Clay Jenkins' , Abbott and Paxton say, violates the governor's latest executive order on COVID-19 which says that no governmental entity, including school districts, could require mask-wearing.

"Attention-grabbing judges and mayors have defied executive orders before when the pandemic first started, and the courts ruled on our side 바카라 게임 웹사이트 the law. I'm confident the outcomes to any suits will side with liberty and individual choice, not mandates and government overreach," Paxton said.

Abbott and Paxton's statement doesn't mention San Antonio and Bexar County, who have been granted a temporary restraining order against the governor's mask order and announced their own mask mandate, or Houston's Fort Bend County, which announced Wednesday a temporary restraining order of their own.

"The virus is not a political issue, and it's not an issue that we can resolve by way of ignoring it, and following GA 38 (Abbott's mask order) would have had the local officials here in Fort Bend County ignoring the virus," Fort Bend County Attorney Bridgette Smith-Lawson said after a judge granted their emergency health directive request.