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No Pediatric ICU Beds Available in NTX as COVID-19 Cases Surge – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

On Thursday, the DFW Hospital Council announced that there are no available pediatric ICU beds in North Texas.

There are currently 73 confirmed COVID-19 pediatric patients hospitalized in the trauma service area E.

That is the highest level of pediatric COVID-19 patients ever treated.

Trauma service area E includes all the hospitals in 19 counties, including: Cooke, Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, Erath, Fannin, Grayson, Hood, Hunt, Johnson, Kaufman, Navarro, Palo Pinto, Parker, Rockwall, Somervell, Tarrant, and Wise counties. 

On top of the COVID-19 surge, children’s hospitals are treating an unusual number of RSV patients for the summer season. The overall percent occupancy of all inpatient pediatric patients to bed capacity is currently running 94.55%.

There are currently 2,690 COVID-19 adult patients in TSA-E hospitals. That’s an increase of 178 from 2,512 on Wednesday. This represents 18% of bed capacity and 42.17% of adult ICU patients. Well over a third of adult ICU patients in TSA-E currently have COVID-19.

The COVID-19 cases breakdown by county like this: Tarrant 919, Dallas 786, Collin 330, Denton 165, Hunt 53, Grayson 98, Ellis 71 and Rockwall 87.

The DFW Hospital Council says the majority of the patients are not vaccinated.

Hospitalizations have increased approximately five times over the past 30 days.

There are currently 75 available adult staffed ICU beds in TSA-E with 23 in Dallas County, 21 in Tarrant, 16 in Collin, 10 in Denton, three in Wise, one in Erath and one in Kaufman. 

The Hospital Council says as of Thursday, 343 COVID-19 adults are on ventilators. 

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Arkansas nearly out of ICU beds as Delta variant fuels U.S. pandemic

NEW YORK, Aug 9 (Reuters) – Only eight intensive care unit beds were available on Monday in the state of Arkansas, its governor said, as the rapid spread of the Delta variant of the coronavirus pushed cases and hospitalizations in the United States to a six-month high.

In neighboring Texas, Governor Greg Abbott asked hospitals to postpone elective surgeries as the variant raged through swathes of the country including many southern states grappling with low vaccination rates.

Nationwide, COVID-19 cases have averaged 100,000 for three days in a row, up 35% over the past week, according to a Reuters tally of public health data. Louisiana, Florida and Arkansas reported the most new cases in the past week, based on population. (Graphic of U.S. coronavirus cases)

Hospitalizations rose 40% and deaths, a lagging indicator, registered an 18% risenationwide in the past week.

“We saw the largest single-day increase in hospitalizations and have eclipsed our previous high of COVID hospitalizations,” Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson said on Twitter. “There are currently only eight ICU beds available in the state.”

Hutchinson, a Republican, urged Arkansans to be vaccinated against the pandemic, which many of his constituents have been hesitant to do in part because of widespread disinformation about COVID-19 vaccines.

Abbott, who in May issued an order banning local governments from requiring masks to help prevent the spread of the virus, said on Monday he would increase the number of clinics in Texas where COVID patients can receive infusions of antibodies.

Florida set a new single-day record with 28,317 cases on Sunday, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Hospitalizations in Florida have been at record highs for eight days in a row, according to the Reuters analysis. Most Florida students are due back in the classroom this week as some school districts debate whether to require masks for pupils.

Holding signs, mask proponents and opponents gathered at the Pinellas County Schools building near St. Petersburg on Monday where the school board called a special session to discuss mask protocols.

The head of the nation’s second-largest teachers’ union on Sunday announced a shift in course by backing mandated vaccinations for U.S. teachers in an effort to protect students who are too young to be inoculated.

The number of children hospitalized with COVID-19 is rising across the country, a trend health experts attribute to the Delta variant being more likely to infect children than the original Alpha strain.

With the virus once again upending Americans’ lives after a brief summer lull, the push to vaccinate those still reluctant has gained fresh momentum.

The Pentagon on Monday said that it will seek Biden’s approval by the middle of September to require military members to get vaccinated.

STURGIS CROWDS

The evolving pandemic and the rapid community spread spurred by the Delta variant have prompted the cancellation of some large-scale events. Last week, organizers canceled the New York Auto Show that had been set for later this month.

The New Orleans Jazz Fest was canceled for the second straight year as Louisiana fights a severe outbreak.

But fears about the Delta variant seem to not have dampened the mood in Sturgis, a small town in South Dakota that welcomes hundreds of thousands of motorcycle enthusiasts for the annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.

“It is one of the biggest crowds I have seen,” Meade County Sheriff Ron Merwin said in an email. “I think there will definitely be some spread.”

Sturgis has partnered with health officials to provide COVID-19 self-test kits to rally-goers but the event, taking place Aug. 6-15, does not require proof of vaccination or mask-wearing.

Last year, health officials cited the rally as a super-spreader event that contributed to an autumn surge in the Midwest.

While cases and hospitalizations were relatively low in South Dakota when the event started on Aug. 7, 2020, three months later the state set a record for hospitalized COVID-19 patients and new infections.

Reporting by Maria Caspani in New York, Lisa Shumaker in Chicago and Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento; Additional reporting by Octavio Jones in Largo, Florida; Editing by David Gregorio and Sonya Hepinstall

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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‘There are only so many beds’: COVID-19 surge hits hospitals

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Florida hospitals slammed with COVID-19 patients are suspending elective surgeries and putting beds in conference rooms, an auditorium and a cafeteria. In Georgia, medical centers are turning people away for lack of space. And in Louisiana, the sick are left waiting and waiting some more in the emergency room before being airlifted elsewhere.

“We are seeing a surge like we’ve not seen before in terms of the patients coming,” Dr. Marc Napp, chief medical officer for Memorial Healthcare System in Hollywood, Florida, said Wednesday. “It’s the sheer number coming in at the same time. There are only so many beds, so many doctors, only so many nurses.”

Coronavirus hospitalizations are surging again as the more contagious delta variant rages across the country, forcing medical centers to return to a crisis footing just weeks after many closed their COVID-19 wards and field hospitals and dropped other emergency measures.

The number of people now in the hospital in the U.S. with the virus has more than tripled over the past month, from an average of roughly 12,000 to almost 43,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That is still nowhere close to the nearly 124,000 in hospitals at the very peak of the winter surge in January. But health experts say this wave is perhaps more worrying because it has risen more swiftly than prior ones. Also, a disturbingly large share of patients this time are young adults.

And to the frustration of public health experts and front-line health care workers, the vast majority of those now hospitalized are unvaccinated.

Florida, Georgia and Louisiana alone account for nearly 40% of all hospitalizations in the country. Louisiana and Georgia have some of the lowest vaccination rates in the nation, with around 38% of their populations fully inoculated. Florida is closer to the national rate, at 49%. By way of comparison, most New England states are well over 60%.

The variant has sent new U.S. cases surging to 94,000 a day on average, a level not seen since mid-February. Deaths per day have soared 75% in the past two weeks, climbing from an average of 244 to 426. The overall U.S. death toll stands at more than 614,000.

Across Florida, more than 12,000 patients were hospitalized with COVID-19 on Wednesday, and nearly 2,500 of them were in intensive care unit beds. The state is averaging nearly 18,000 new cases a day, up from fewer than 2,000 during the first week of July. In all, Florida has seen more than 39,100 coronavirus deaths.

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has stood firm against mask rules and other compulsory measures, saying it is important to keep Florida’s economy moving.

“Florida is a free state, and we will empower our people. We will not allow Joe Biden and his bureaucratic flunkies to come in and commandeer the rights and freedoms of Floridians,” DeSantis, who has been exploring a possible for president in 2024, said in a fundraising email Wednesday.

The reversal in fortune for some hospitals has been stark.

In central Florida, AdventHealth hospitals had 1,350 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 as of Thursday, the most ever. The health care system has postponed non-emergency surgery and limited visitors to concentrate on treating coronavirus patients.

Less than two months ago, Miami’s Baptist Hospital had fewer than 20 COVID-19 patients and was closing down coronavirus units. By Monday, hospital officials were reopening some of those units to handle an influx of more than 200 new virus patients.

“As fast as we are opening up units, they’re being filled with COVID patients,” said Dr. Sergio Segarra, the hospital’s chief medical officer.

In Georgia, more than two dozen hospitals said this week that they have had to turn away patients as the number of hospitalizations for COVID-19 has risen to 2,600 statewide.

And in Louisiana, smaller hospitals are struggling to find larger, better-equipped ones to take in their more seriously ill patients.

Lee Chastant, CEO of West Feliciana Hospital in the state’s rural southeast, said a COVID-19 patient was in the ER about two days until the staff could finally transfer the person to New Orleans.

The swift turn of events has been disheartening for health care workers who just weeks ago thought the battle was in its final stages. The crisis is also making it harder for hospitals to provide other crucial types of medical care.

“If you don’t get vaccinated, you are taking resources from people who have diseases or injuries or illnesses,” said Dr. Vincent Shaw, a family physician in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. “COVID doesn’t call people who have had strokes, who have had heart attacks, who have had other horrific or traumatic things happen and say, ’Y’all take the week off. I am going to take over the ER and the ICU.’”

In Florida, Judi Custer said she and her husband did everything they were told to do to ward off the virus. The Fort Lauderdale retirees got vaccinated and wore masks, even when the rules were lifted. Still, they fell ill with COVID-19 a few weeks ago, and 80-year-old Doug Custer was hospitalized for five days.

Judy Custer said she still believes more people need to get vaccinated.

“We’ve had it long enough to know it is helping people, even if they get sick with it,” she said. “You’re less likely to be put on a ventilator. You’re less likely to be hospitalized.”

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Marcelo reported from Boston. Associated Press reporter Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, and Frieda Frisaro in Miami contributed to this story.

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Mississippi has only 6 open ICU beds, Arkansas only 25 as delta variant fuels Covid surge

Mississippi and Arkansas face shortages of available intensive care beds as the delta variant sparks yet another surge in coronavirus cases around the country.

Only six ICU beds for severely ill patients were available across all of Mississippi as of Wednesday morning, said Dr. Jonathan Wilson, chief administrative officer at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.

Health officials are coordinating to transfer patients when possible to alleviate some of the strain on hospitals. Intensive care patients include not only those afflicted with Covid-19 but also those who suffer from traditional health issues, such as heart attacks and strokes.

“We are at the cusp of this. We know that we aren’t at the crest of this wave,” Wilson said Wednesday. “It’s bad, but it’s probably going to get a little worse.”

Only about 35 percent of the state’s population is fully vaccinated, according to state data.

Arkansas, which shares a border with Mississippi, reported that only 25 ICU beds were open as of Wednesday, according to NBC affiliate KARK of Little Rock. About 42 percent of the state’s population has been fully vaccinated, according to the state Health Department.

Allison Moore, an intensive care nurse, helps a Covid-19 patient at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.Joe Ellis / University of Mississippi Medical Center Communications

There are also serious ICU shortages in some regions of Louisiana, which neighbors both states and also faces a surge in cases. Its Health Department divides the state data into regions, with Region 5, covering the Lake Charles area in the southwest corner of the state, having the fewest available ICU beds: two.

Region 4 faces a similar shortage, with only eight beds available to potential patients.

In contrast, Region 1, which covers the southeast corner of the state in the New Orleans region, has 88 beds open to patients, according to the Health Department. People who aren’t fully vaccinated account for 90 percent of Covid-19 hospitalizations in Louisiana.

Dr. Catherine O’Neal, the chief medical officer at Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge, said the hospital has become overwhelmed with cases.

“We’re rationing care to be able to see the sickest people first, and that means that we are not providing adequate care to many people right now so that we can meet the needs of the sickest first,” O’Neal said Wednesday. “That safety net of care that every community depends on for every type of illness is starting to break down, and that’s very concerning.”

Only about 37 percent of Louisianians have been fully vaccinated, Reuters reported.

The delta variant, which is more transmissible than its predecessors, became the dominant strain of the coronavirus in the U.S. last month, and it has prompted a new surge in infections. Coronavirus cases worldwide surpassed 200 million Wednesday, according to a Reuters tally.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued guidance that everyone in high-case areas wear masks indoors, whether they are vaccinated or not. New data the agency released last week showed that those who have been inoculated but still become infected are just as likely to spread the new strain as their unvaccinated counterparts are.

Breakthrough cases, or infections despite vaccination, represent less than .08 percent of those who have been fully vaccinated since January, NBC News data showed last week. Vaccines have proven to be highly effective even in those cases, mostly preventing serious illnesses that would require hospitalization.

The number of breakthrough cases could be higher than the 125,682 cases tracked by NBC News on Friday, because of the milder symptoms that can occur for those who are vaccinated. Vaccinated people who become infected might not have any symptoms and therefore wouldn’t feel the need to be tested.

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Austin health officials warn there are 16 staffed ICU beds left for 2.3 million residents as COVID cases surge

Health officials in Austin, Texas, issued a dire warning on Friday: There are only about 16 staffed ICU beds left for the entire region, an 11-county area that’s home to more than two million people. It’s the lowest number of ICU beds available in the region since the pandemic began, the city said. 

“The latest COVID-19 spike is putting extraordinary pressure on our hospitals, emergency departments and healthcare professionals, and it has further challenged hospital staffing due to a longstanding nursing shortage,” a group of hospitals said in a statement from the city. 

All of the hospitals in Travis County — where Austin is located — and in 10 other counties are part of what the state calls Trauma Region O. Trauma Region O serves approximately 2.3 million people, according to the city’s statement. 

Austin’s public health department urged the community to act “as the situation becomes critical.” 

“We are running out of time and our community must act now,” Dr. Desmar Walkes of the Austin-Travis County Health Authority said in the city’s statement. “Our ICU capacity is reaching a critical point where the level of risk to the entire community has significantly increased and not just to those who are needing treatment for COVID.”

The dire figures come as Austin is battling a spike in hospitalizations. According to data gathered by the city and Travis County, the 7-day average of COVID-19 hospitalizations has increased by over 47% over the past week. In that time, the number of COVID-19 patients in local ICU’s jumped from 91 to 117, a 28% increase, and the number of patients on ventilators rose from 47 to 65, a 38% increase, the city’s statement said. 

In July, more than 4,600 new COVID-19 cases and 19 deaths have been reported to Austin’s public health department, the city added. 

In a statement shared at an Austin City Council meeting on Tuesday, a local nurse practitioner said the intensive care unit capacity at their hospital recently “blew up.”

“They are literally all on ventilators and/or ECMO lung bypass,” the nurse practitioner wrote in the statement. 

“I am angry. I am so angry,” they added. “I am also sad and dismayed. The third round is, was, entirely preventable. It is devastating to see and experience firsthand.”



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Olympian Rhys McClenaghan puts so-called anti-sex beds to the test

Rhys McClenaghan, who will be representing Ireland on the pommel horse during the Olympics, sought to debunk rumors of anti-sex beds in athletes’ rooms during the Games.

McClenaghan, 21, posted a video of himself in his room at the Olympic Village on Saturday and jumped on the bed to prove it isn’t going to break with any sudden movements.

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American runner Paul Chelimo tweeted about the so-called anti-sex beds in the Olympic Village on Friday.

“Beds to be installed in Tokyo Olympic Village will be made of cardboard, this is aimed at avoiding intimacy among athletes,” he wrote. “Beds will be able to withstand the weight of a single person to avoid situations beyond sports. I see no problem for distance runners, even 4 of us can do.”

TOKYO OLYMPIC ORGANIZERS: CONDOMS ‘NOT FOR USE AT THE ATHLETE’S VILLAGE’

According to Dezeen magazine, officials set up about 18,000 cardboard beds. The 100% recyclable beds were made by the Japanese company Airweave.

But from the looks of McClenaghan’s video, any athlete who is planning on participating in some extracurricular activities might be able to do so without the threat of their bed falling apart.

Officials are planning to hand out some 150,000 condoms at the Games but for awareness purposes only. According to Reuters, athletes have been warned against mingling with each other in hopes of curbing the spread of the coronavirus.

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“The distribution of condoms is not for use at the athlete’s village, but to have athletes take them back to their home countries to raise awareness” of HIV and AIDS issues, a Tokyo 2020 official told Reuters.

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Athletes to sleep on ‘anti-sex’ cardboard beds at Olympic Games amid COVID

Lustful Olympic athletes should think twice before making the bed rock in Tokyo.

The world’s best sports competitors are set to spend their nights on cardboard beds — allegedly designed to collapse under the weight of fornicators to discourage sex amid COVID-19.

NOVAK DJOKOVIC POSTS HE IS IN FOR TOKYO OLYMPICS

Olympic officials — who already warned 2021 Games participants to avoid two-person push-ups because of the coronavirus — have set up 18,000 of the cardboard beds in the notoriously sex-crazed athletes’ village, according to Dezeen magazine.

“Beds to be installed in Tokyo Olympic Village will be made of cardboard, this is aimed at avoiding intimacy among athletes,” American distance runner Paul Chelimo tweeted.

“Beds will be able to withstand the weight of a single person to avoid situations beyond sports,” Chelimo cracked. “I see no problem for distance runners, even 4 of us can do.”

Olympic athletes have never shied away from hanky panky, but officials have warned it could spell particular trouble this year amid the pandemic.

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The 100 percent recyclable cardboard beds were designed by the Japanese company Airweave.

But officials are apparently aware it’s going to take a lot more than the makeshift berths to keep players out of the pole position.

They are distributing a cache of condoms to the athletes, as they have at every Olympic Games since 1988. This year, the condom tally is 160,000. Still, that’s a far cry from the 450,000 doled out for the last summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 2016.

This year, Olympic officials insist the rubber is for athletes to bring home to spread the message of safe sex.

“Our intent and goal is not for athletes to use the condoms at the Olympic Village, but to help with awareness by taking them back to their own countries,” the Tokyo Olympics Organizing Committee said in a statement to Japan Today.

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At least two athletes have already tested positive for the coronavirus at the Tokyo Olympic Village, officials said Sunday. Another resident of the Village, a visitor from abroad involved in the Games’ planning, was reported as having tested positive a day earlier.

To read more from the New York Post, click here.



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Athletes to sleep on ‘anti-sex’ cardboard beds at Olympic Games

Lustful Olympic athletes should think twice before making the bed rock in Tokyo.

The world’s best sports competitors are set to spend their nights on cardboard beds — allegedly designed to collapse under the weight of fornicators to discourage sex amid COVID-19.

Olympic officials — who already warned 2021 Games participants to avoid two-person push-ups because of the coronavirus — have set up 18,000 of the cardboard beds in the notoriously sex-crazed athletes’ village, according to Dezeen magazine.

“Beds to be installed in Tokyo Olympic Village will be made of cardboard, this is aimed at avoiding intimacy among athletes,” American distance runner Paul Chelimo tweeted.

“Beds will be able to withstand the weight of a single person to avoid situations beyond sports,” Chelimo cracked. “I see no problem for distance runners, even 4 of us can do.”

Journalists take photos of the cardboard beds for athletes at the Tokyo Olympics.
AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko

Olympic athletes have never shied away from hanky panky, but officials have warned it could spell particular trouble this year amid the pandemic.

The 100 percent recyclable cardboard beds were designed by the Japanese company Airweave.

But officials are apparently aware it’s going to take a lot more than the makeshift berths to keep players out of the pole position.

A close-up of the beds show the entire frame is constructed of light-weight cardboard.
CHINE NOUVELLE/SIPA/REX

They are distributing a cache of condoms to the athletes, as they have at every Olympic Games since 1988. This year, the condom tally is 160,000. Still, that’s a far cry from the 450,000 doled out for the last summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 2016.

This year, Olympic officials insist the rubber is for athletes to bring home to spread the message of safe sex.

“Our intent and goal is not for athletes to use the condoms at the Olympic Village, but to help with awareness by taking them back to their own countries,” the Tokyo Olympics Organizing Committee said in a statement to Japan Today.

Olympic officials are warning against sex at the Games this year amid COVID-19.
Akio Kon/Pool Photo via AP
Two beds seen in a room in the Tokyo Olympic Village.
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

At least two athletes have already tested positive for the coronavirus at the Tokyo Olympic Village, officials said Sunday. Another resident of the Village, a visitor from abroad involved in the Games’ planning, was reported as having tested positive a day earlier.



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Japan coronavirus: It has the most beds per capita in the developed world so why is its health system crashing?

When her condition worsened, she called the public health center in Hyogo Prefecture for assistance but she said no one answered her calls.

Instead, she had to isolate in her tiny bedroom, while her children, age 3 and 6, slept alone in the living room for nearly two weeks. Her mother would drop off food for the family, but could not stay because the children had been exposed to the virus, and they couldn’t get tested for nearly a week. Su said she communicated with her children via a tablet — and could often hear them fighting.

“My small children were trapped in the small living room alone without going outside at all for 10 days. “I was feeling sick, in terrible condition, but I felt more pain leaving my children alone.”

“I felt like I was abandoning my children.”Su

A representative at the Hyogo Prefecture Health Center could not speak directly to Su’s case, but said that while they try to contact isolating patients daily, the holiday period was incredibly busy.

Japan’s national healthcare system, which has the most hospital beds in the developed world per capita, has been praised in the past for its high quality of service. The government has even credited the country’s long life-expectancy rates — the highest of OECD countries — to its first-class, affordable healthcare system.

But the Covid-19 pandemic has stretched the medical system to the brink, as Japan deals with its worst wave since the pandemic began. Cases have more than doubled in the past two months to more than 406,000 cases.

And while the peak period of the current wave has passed, with cases falling from more than 7,000 a day in January to fewer than 3,000 daily cases this month, the medical system is still under strain.

As of February 4, more than 8,700 people across 10 prefectures, who tested positive for Covid-19, were waiting for a hospital bed or space at an isolation center. The week before, more than 18,000 people across 11 prefectures were waiting, according to the prefectures’ health ministries.

That means people are dying at home from Covid-19, fighting deteriorating conditions alone, and spreading the virus to family members.

Healthcare on tap

Despite Japan’s rapid rise in cases in recent months, its infection numbers and deaths still pale in comparison to those in the US, where daily cases on average exceed 100,000.

But experts say the expectations towards healthcare are different in Japan.

Since the 1960s, Japan’s universal health insurance system has given coverage to all Japanese citizens — regardless of income or pre-existing conditions. But experts say easy access to care has led to many patients seeking more care than necessary, taking the system for granted

“We regard (healthcare) as something like tap water, but now the tens of thousands of people with Covid-19 had to stay home and they cannot have access to the health care system, they can’t be hospitalized and they can’t even see doctors,” said Dr. Kentaro Iwata, professor and doctor at the Kobe University Hospital. “That’s a very harsh reality, which is very difficult to accept for many Japanese.”

It is not unusual for Covid-19 patients with severe symptoms in other countries to wait for hospital space, said Naoiki Ikegami, professor emeritus at Keio University.

But in earlier waves of the pandemic in Japan, most people who tested positive for Covid-19 were automatically hospitalized, said Ikegami.

“That was how Covid-19 was dealt with in the first and second phases, so there’s an expectation that anyone with Covid-19 is going to be hospitalized, even if they had only mild symptoms,” Ikegami said.

The system has since been adjusted so that not everyone is hospitalized. But the rates of hospitalization for Covid-19 are still higher in Japan than in other countries.

Faults in the system

In 2019, there were 13 beds per 1,000 people in Japan, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). That compares to less than 3 per 1,000 people in the US and UK. The OECD average is 4.7.
But Iwata, from Kobe University Hospital, says those figures are misleading. While Japan has more than a million hospital beds, for a population of roughly 126 million, the majority are for the mildly sick — not for critically ill people. The country has only about 5 intensive care beds per 100,000 people, while Germany has nearly 34, the highest in the OECD, and America has nearly 26.

Staffing is another key problem in Japan’s medical system.

Japan has only 1,631 infectious disease specialists across 8,300 hospitals, according to the Japanese Health Ministry, meaning the majority of hospitals don’t have an infectious disease specialist.

Unlike other nearby Asian territories such as China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan, Japan managed to avoid earlier coronavirus outbreaks, including severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS).

“Many infectious diseases didn’t come to Japan, so we didn’t prepare,” said Iwata.

“We didn’t train a lot of specialists, we didn’t train the hospital wards, and we didn’t prepare the healthcare system for infections, and this is the result of it,” he said.

Across Japan, hundreds of public healthcare centers take calls from patients and direct them to medical care, monitor their health, arrange testing and contact trace.

Dr. Hideo Maeda, the head of a public health center in Tokyo’s Kita Ward, said his staff members have quadrupled to 40 since the pandemic started, but it’s still not enough. In his ward alone, every day, dozens of patients are waiting for hospital space.

“Many staff are working every day until midnight, on weekends and holidays,” Maeda said. “We’re exhausted and overwhelmed — psychologically — with stress. Our staff has to make difficult decisions about people’s lives in a short period of time.”

In a December Kyodo News survey, around half of the responding hospitals that offer advanced medical procedures said they face a shortage of nurses and doctors.

A confusing response

In January, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga made a rare apology. “As the one in charge, I feel terribly sorry,” he said. “We have not been able to provide the necessary care.”

His government has been blamed for its slow and indecisive response to the pandemic. Suga dismissed the need for a state of emergency in late December, only to declare one for Tokyo and several other prefectures the next month. Before that, his administration encouraged domestic consumption with a “Go To” campaign, which gave Japanese citizens steep discounts to travel and eat at home. That campaign was not suspended until December.

Kenji Shibuya, director of the Institute for Population Health at King’s College London, said Japan’s response has been “too slow and confusing.”

“On one hand they encouraged domestic travel and eating out, on the other they just asked people to take caution.”Kenji Shibuya

Last week, the Japanese parliament passed two bills that give the authorities power to fine violators of rules, including businesses that refuse to shorten hours and infected people who refuse to cooperate with health officials.

Under the new antivirus law, the government can also request hospitals to accept Covid-19 patients, or publicly name them if they do not respond.

Most Covid-19 patients in Japan are being treated by large public hospitals.

However, the majority of hospitals in Japan are private hospitals, but most of them do not have the staff and equipment to treat Covid-19 patients. According to January Health Ministry data, 30% of private hospitals can accept Covid-19 patients, while 84% of public-supported institutions can.
Japan is also behind many developed countries in its vaccine rollout. It’s not set to start inoculating medical workers until later this month and senior citizens until April 1, at the earliest.

The government has yet to announce a timeline for the rest of its citizens. The vaccine will be voluntary and convincing people to receive it will be a challenge in a country with a history of safety scares and concerns about side effects.

Earlier this week it was announced that Japan will have to discard one in six doses of the Covid-19 Pfizer vaccine, of which it has ordered 144 million doses, because the country’s standard syringes will only be able to extract 5 doses of the vaccine from each vial. Special syringes would be needed to collect the sixth dose.

That’s if the government can convince people to take the vaccine.

According to a recent study by the Lancet, Japan has one of the lowest rates of vaccine confidence in the world. Fewer than 30% of people strongly agreed that vaccines were safe and effective compared to at least 50% of Americans.

Su has now recovered from Covid-19, witnessing firsthand the limits of the public health system during a pandemic.

She says she still has some lingering symptoms, but she’s just thankful to be able to hold her children again.

When her isolation ended, the first thing they said to her was: “Ma, please hug me.”

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