Opinions

Are we OK? A message from Alaska’s hospitals and nursing homes on COVID-19

During the past month, decision-makers, stakeholders and media have routinely inquired about “hospital capacity” in light of increasing COVID-19 case counts. The real question being asked is “Are we OK?” The Alaska State Hospital and Nursing Home Association has been answering this question as any hospital would: We look at our daily census report (patients in a hospital bed), consider any relevant variables and comment where we stand with capacity at the given moment.

The good news is capacity has been strong and intact. In general, intensive care unit capacity is consistently open, ventilator utilization is low and medical/surgical occupancy is very manageable. However, does this really answer the question, “Are we OK?”

Hospital capacity is crucial, but it is finite and a lagging indicator for where we as a public stand with COVID-19. We had 116 new cases Sunday, 77 the day prior, and 55 before that. A lot has changed from just one month ago, when it was concerning to see 20 positive cases in a day.

So, are we OK? The answer is no. Simple math dictates where this all leads. We have seen this play out in Florida, Arizona, Texas, New York, and the list goes on. There is a direct correlation between positive case counts in a community and the risk for nursing home outbreaks. Unchecked case counts will lead to increased hospitalizations and deaths, and we will be brought to a breaking point.

Yes, we have hospital beds open, and we have surge plans ready to deploy. However, our health care heroes are not immune to COVID-19. If our front-line caretakers get infected, which they will, we could build hundreds of hospitals overnight and it would not make a difference.

COVID-19 is exhausting and we all wish it would go away, and no one wants to go back into lockdown. Unfortunately, rapidly increasing case counts and basic math tell us we are headed right back to lockdown if we do not change. If you want to avoid this, wear a mask, limit your contact, stop participating in large gatherings, and move away from unsafe activities.

Hospital capacity is intact for today, but unless we change the way we handle this as a people, it won’t be tomorrow.

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Jared Kosin, J.D., M.B.A., is the president and CEO of the Alaska State Hospital and Nursing Home Association (ASHNHA). Kosin is an attorney with an MBA and extensive experience in health care and public policy. ASHNHA represents more than 65 hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care organizations who employ over 10,000 Alaskans. Its membership spans geographically from PeaceHealth Ketchikan Medical Center to Samuel Simmonds Memorial Hospital in Utqiagvik.

The views expressed here are the writer’s and are not necessarily endorsed by the Anchorage Daily News, which welcomes a broad range of viewpoints. To submit a piece for consideration, email commentary(at)adn.com. Send submissions shorter than 200 words to letters@adn.com or click here to submit via any web browser. Read our full guidelines for letters and commentaries here.

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