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哥伦布、匹兹堡及各地消息
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Ohio’s Hospital Capacity Data in Ten Charts
Interactive: Explore Newly Released Hospital Data
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By Lucia Walinchus and Boniface Womber
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This article provided by Eye on Ohio, the nonprofit,
nonpartisan Ohio Center for Journalism. Please join our free mailing
list as this helps us provide more public service reporting.
Ohio’s COVID-19 cases are surging for the third time, and social
media channels have exploded with anecdotes describing how much
space there is available at area hospitals. Some “undercover” videos
show patients roaming empty wards. Other posts tell tearful stories
by doctors and nurses exhausted from overwhelming demand.
After a seven month legal battle, the Ohio Court of Claims recently
ordered the Ohio Department of Health to release to Eye on Ohio
local information on the number of beds, ventilators, and other
equipment available at local hospitals.
The data paints a complicated, constantly changing picture of Ohio’s
efforts to “flatten the curve.” Some hospitals seem to be doing
fine, while other hospitals seem to be constantly scrambling for
open beds. The result is heavily dependent on where patients live,
though overall the number of available staffed beds is shrinking.
“We are already at a very high level. We are already seeing our
hospitals fill up,” said Governor Mike DeWine at a press conference
on Tuesday.
Some hospitals have seen their available resources shrink, while
others have remained relatively stable. For example, despite having
roughly the same population as Cleveland or Cincinnati, Columbus has
seen far fewer beds available for hospitalized patients.
And rural areas with a relatively stable number of beds available
have, on average, far fewer beds overall.
Dr. Matthew Colflesh at Trinity Health System in Steubenville, said
that in the first two waves, his rural hospital didn’t see that many
patients, just nine in the first wave and five in the second.
“My theme now is that things are different. We have reached a point
in the past two weeks where the max number of hospitalizations in
this hospital is 34,” he said.
One bright spot has been that personal protective equipment has, so
far, remained relatively stable, though half of Ohio’s known
coronavirus cases have been reported in just the past five weeks.
Though not all hospitals report their equipment numbers.
On March 19, Ohio postponed all elective surgeries, causing a large
spike in hospital beds available. On June 2, Ohio resumed other
procedures. In early November, hospital officials announced they
would start transferring patients to other systems to help even out
patient loads.
TThe Ohio Department of Health released records of staffed hospital
capacity to Eye on Ohio from March 16 through Nov. 20. Eye on Ohio
has requested the most recent data, from after that date.
“As is true in areas across the state, our biggest capacity
constraint is not in physical space, but in staffing availability,
both of which we monitor daily,” said Lisa Henderson, Vice President
of Health Initiatives at the Greater Dayton Area Hospital
Association. “Our hospital leaders continue to work together to plan
for what comes next, on behalf of our regional hospital community to
ensure we can continue to care for the people in our region, whether
that care is needed for COVID-19 or any other medical condition.”
In terms of hospital capacity, our hospitals are extremely busy,”
said Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff, Chief Medical Officer of the Ohio
Department of Health. “Any time you have a SINGLE diagnosis that is
occupying 20, 30 percent of the beds in your hospital, you’re
extremely busy. Because that’s unheard of.”
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