Overwhelmed hospital converts parking garage to treat COVID-19 patients and people line for hours to get tested as national US hospitalizations surge to record highs of 79k and daily fatalities spike to 1,800

 COVID-19 hospitalizations across the United States have more than doubled in the past month and set new records every day this week as overwhelmed hospitals covert chapels, cafeterias and even parking garages into patient treatment areas to cope with the surge in new admissions. 

Conditions inside the nation's hospitals are deteriorating by the day as COVID-19 infections continue to skyrocket across the US and the nationwide death toll surpassed 250,000. 

The number of people in the hospital with COVID-19 surged to yet another record high of 79,000 yesterday and cases, which are on the rise in all 50 states, increased to 170,000.


Daily deaths surged to 1,800 yesterday and are now averaging 1,200 per day based on a seven-day rolling average, the highest it has been in months.

The Midwest is currently the hardest-hit region based on the number of cases per capita. North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Nebraska are the top five worst-affected states. North Dakota has had the highest number of infections and deaths per capita in the world in the last week. 

Long lines to get tested for COVID-19 have reappeared across the US as cases rise across the nation and people rush to get tested before reuniting with relatives for Thanksgiving, even as federal health authorities Thursday pleaded with citizens to avoid gathering for the holiday for fear of spreading the virus. 

Lines spanned multiple city blocks at testing sites across New York City this week, leaving people waiting three or more hours before they could even enter health clinics. In Los Angeles, thousands of people lined up outside Dodger Stadium for drive-thru testing. 

COVID-19 patients are now being treated in a parking garage at the Renown Regional Medical Center in Reno, Nevada, as conditions inside the nation's hospitals are deteriorating by the day

COVID-19 patients are now being treated in a parking garage at the Renown Regional Medical Center in Reno, Nevada, as conditions inside the nation's hospitals are deteriorating by the day

COVID-19 hospitalizations across the United States have more than doubled in the past month and set new records every day this week. The number of people in the hospital with COVID-19 surged to yet another record high of 79,000 yesterday

COVID-19 hospitalizations across the United States have more than doubled in the past month and set new records every day this week. The number of people in the hospital with COVID-19 surged to yet another record high of 79,000 yesterday


It comes as the US Centers of Disease Control on Thursday recommended Americans not travel for Thanksgiving to mitigate the spread of the virus and advised against gathering with anyone who has not lived in the same household for at least 14 days, which is the incubation time for the virus.

The recommendation from the nation's top public health agency on Thursday is some of the firmest guidance yet from the government on curtailing traditional gatherings to fight the outbreak.  

In a bid to curb the spread, the CDC is warning that large indoor household gatherings this holiday season could make the situation even worse.  

If families do decide to include returning college students, military members or others for turkey and stuffing, the CDC is recommending that the hosts take added precautions: Gatherings should be outdoors if possible, with people keeping 6 feet apart and wearing masks and just one person serving the food.   

With regard to those who do still decide to travel, the CDC recommends doing so 'as safely as possible,' which includes wearing a mask while in public, maintaining social distancing and washing hands often with soap and water. 

Officials said they were also posting recommendations on their website on how to stay safe during the holidays for those Americans who do choose to travel. 

The American Hospital Association and American Medical Association also issued a joint plea urging people to scale back Thanksgiving celebrations. 

They cited spikes after Memorial Day, July 4th and Labor Day as evidence that Thanksgiving travel will result in a surge in cases. 

'The record-shattering surge underway is resulting in uncontrolled community spread and infection that has already overburdened health systems in some areas and will ultimately consume capacity of our health care system and may reduce the availability of care in many places in our country,' they said.  

Hospitals are becoming overwhelmed across the country, not just converting space into patient-treating areas, but with staff members also desperately calling around to other medical centers in search of open beds as fatigue and frustration are setting in among front-line workers. 

At least 25 states are currently reporting shortages in nurses and doctors, according to an analysis by STAT, a medical-focused news organization. 

The situation is now so severe that some patients are being transferred hundreds of miles to other states to be treated. 


Long lines to get tested have reappeared across the US in recent weeks - a reminder that the nation's testing system remains unable to keep pace with the virus.

The delays are happening as the country braces for winter weather, flu season and holiday travel, all of which are expected to amplify a US outbreak.

Laboratories warned that continuing shortages of key supplies are likely to create more bottlenecks and delays, especially as cases rise across the nation and people rush to get tested before reuniting with relatives. 

'As those cases increase, demand increases and turnaround times may increase,' said Scott Becker, CEO of the Association of Public Health Laboratories. 'So it's like a dog chasing its tail.' 

On the one hand, the fact that testing problems are only now emerging — more than a month into the latest virus surge — is a testament to the country's increased capacity. The U.S. is testing over 1.5 million people per day on average, more than double the rate in July, when many Americans last faced long lines.

But experts like Johns Hopkins University researcher Gigi Gronvall said the U.S. is still falling far short of what's needed to control the virus.

Gronvall said the current testing rate 'is on its way, but it's nowhere close to what's needed to shift the course of this epidemic.' Many experts have called for anywhere between 4 million and 15 million daily tests to suppress the virus.

Trump administration officials estimate the U.S. has enough tests this month to screen between 4 million and 5 million people a day.

Adm. Brett Giroir, the US official overseeing testing, downplayed reports of lines and delays earlier this week. In some cases, he said, lines are caused by a lack of scheduling by testing locations, which should stagger appointments.   

In California, health officials have given mixed messages about whether residents should get tested before the holiday.

San Francisco’s Department of Emergency Management warned that people should not use a test to determine if they can travel. But Contra Costa County, across the bay, suggested anyone insistent on gathering with friends or relatives should get tested. 

On Tuesday, federal regulators authorized the first rapid coronavirus test that can be done at home. It delivers results in 30 minutes and will cost roughly $50. But the test kit from Lucira Health will be available by prescription only, and it won’t be rolled out nationally until the spring.

As bad as the wait for testing has become, it is still better than in July, when the US was almost entirely dependent on tests that often take two or more days for labs to process, even under ideal conditions. As cases surged past 70,000 per day, many people had to wait a week or more to learn their results, rendering the information almost worthless for isolating and tracking cases.

In recent months, federal health officials have distributed roughly 60 million rapid, point-of-care tests that deliver results in 15 minutes. Those have helped ease some of the pressure on large labs. But not enough.

Since September 15, the daily count of US tests has increased nearly 100 percent, based on a seven-day rolling average. However, the daily average of new COVID-19 cases has increased over 300 percent, to more than 161,000 as of Wednesday, according to an AP analysis.   

A hospital bed sits inside Renown Regional Medical Center's parking garage, which has been transformed into an alternative care site for COVID-19 patients in Reno, Nevada

A hospital bed sits inside Renown Regional Medical Center's parking garage, which has been transformed into an alternative care site for COVID-19 patients in Reno, Nevada

Personal protective equipment is stacked inside Renown Regional Medical Center's parking garage after being transformed into an emergency COVID-19 care facility

Personal protective equipment is stacked inside Renown Regional Medical Center's parking garage after being transformed into an emergency COVID-19 care facility

Dozens of oxygen tanks can be seen lined up inside Renown Regional Medical Center's parking garage

Dozens of oxygen tanks can be seen lined up inside Renown Regional Medical Center's parking garage

The out-of-control surge is leading governors and mayors across the country to grudgingly issue mask mandates, limit the size of private and public gatherings ahead of Thanksgiving, ban indoor restaurant dining, close gyms or restrict the hours and capacity of bars, stores and other businesses. 

New York City's school system - the nation's largest, with more than 1 million students - suspended in-person classes Wednesday amid a mounting infection rate, a painful setback in a corner of the country that suffered mightily in the spring but had seemingly beaten back the virus months ago. 

Texas is rushing thousands of additional medical staff to overworked hospitals as the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients statewide accelerates toward 8,000 for the first time since a deadly summer outbreak. 

In the worsening rural Texas Panhandle, roughly half of the admitted patients in Lubbock's two main hospitals had COVID-19, and a dozen people with the virus were waiting in the emergency room for beds to open up Tuesday night, said Dr. Ron Cook, the Lubbock County health authority.

'We're in trouble,' Cook said.

In the Texas border city of El Paso, overwhelmed morgues have begun paying jail inmates $2 an hour to help transport the bodies of virus victims. The crush of patients is forcing the city to send its non-COVID-19 cases to hospitals elsewhere in the state.

More than 5,400 extra medical personnel have been deployed around Texas by the state alone, said Lara Anton, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of State Health Services. And that doesn't include the help surging into Texas from the military and volunteer organizations.

'There are only so many medical personnel to go around,' said Dr. Mark McClellan, a former head of the Food and Drug Administration. 

Ballad Health system, which is located in the Appalachian mountains and includes a Tennessee hospital, has warned that it and its workers are stretched so thin that without a change in course, its hospitals might have to turn patients away. Ballad reported having just 16 available ICU beds Wednesday and about 250 team members in isolation or quarantine. It is trying to recruit hundreds more nurses.

In Idaho, doctors warned that hospitals have almost reached the point where they need to ration care, unable to treat everyone because there aren't enough beds or staffers to go around.

'Never in my career did I think we would even contemplate the idea of rationing care in the United States of America,' said Dr. Jim Souza, chief medical officer for St. Luke's Health System. 

NYC: Lines spanned multiple city blocks at testing sites across New York City this week, leaving people waiting three or more hours before they could even enter health clinics

NYC: Lines spanned multiple city blocks at testing sites across New York City this week, leaving people waiting three or more hours before they could even enter health clinics

NYC: Dozens lined up outside a health clinic in New York City on Thursday as COVID-19 testing increased

NYC: Dozens lined up outside a health clinic in New York City on Thursday as COVID-19 testing increased  

MIAMI: Vehicles line up as healthcare workers assist to check in people to be tested at the COVID-19 drive-thru testing center at Miami Beach Convention Center on Wednesday

MIAMI: Vehicles line up as healthcare workers assist to check in people to be tested at the COVID-19 drive-thru testing center at Miami Beach Convention Center on Wednesday

MIAMI: People stand in line to being tested at the COVID-19 mobile testing facility at Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach

MIAMI: People stand in line to being tested at the COVID-19 mobile testing facility at Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach

Healthcare workers process people waiting in line at a United Memorial Medical Center COVID-19 testing site on Thursday in Houston, Texas

Healthcare workers process people waiting in line at a United Memorial Medical Center COVID-19 testing site on Thursday in Houston, Texas

Exhausted hospital staff brace for more coronavirus patients
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In Reno, Nevada, Renown Regional Medical Center began moving some coronavirus patients into its parking garage.

Video of the converted garage before it opened to patients showed rows and rows of beds separated by movable white screens set up on one level of the stark, cavernous garage, each section designated by letters and each bed space marked by a number on the ground. The garage unit currently houses 27 patients but at peak capacity will have enough beds to accommodate more than 1,400, said Dr. Paul Sierzenski, Renown's chief medical officer for acute care.

In Kansas, hospitals are converting spaces such as chapels and cafeterias for use by COVID-19 patients, said Cindy Samuelson, spokeswoman for the Kansas Hospital Association. 

Stormont Vail Health in Topeka, Kansas, devoted an entire hospital floor to COVID-19 patients as their numbers swelled, hitting 90 on Wednesday. The hospital also converted two surgery waiting rooms for use by non-infected patients, spokesman Matt Lara said. 

Kansas health chief Dr. Lee Norman said a system that he likened to air traffic control for coronavirus patients is being put in place so nurses from rural hospitals can make a single call to find a larger hospital that can take their sickest patients.

In some cases, nurses and doctors in Kansas have been spending up to eight hours looking for a large hospital with an opening in cities as far away as Denver, Omaha or Kansas City.

'The problem with this is, by the time you transfer these patients out they already are very ill at that point,' said Kansas nurse practitioner Perry Desbien.

At the same time, patience is wearing thin over the lack of mask wearing that is contributing to the problem in rural areas.

'It kind of feels like we're just, you know, yelling into the abyss,' said Cheyanne Seematter, a registered nurse at Stormont Vail. 'We keep telling everybody to stay home, wear a mask, that it is actually bad here.'

Maryland health officials similarly set up a centralized clearinghouse with information on available ICU beds so that hospitals need only make a single phone call. State authorities also issued an emergency order prohibiting most hospital visitors until further notice.  

Overwhelmed hospital converts parking garage to treat COVID-19 patients and people line for hours to get tested as national US hospitalizations surge to record highs of 79k and daily fatalities spike to 1,800 Overwhelmed hospital converts parking garage to treat COVID-19 patients and people line for hours to get tested as national US hospitalizations surge to record highs of 79k and daily fatalities spike to 1,800 Reviewed by Your Destination on November 20, 2020 Rating: 5

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