California
hospitals face a 'war zone' of flu patients — and are setting up
tents to treat them
16 January, 2018
California hospitals face a 'war zone' of flu patients — and are setting up tents to treat them
Ana
Oktay rushed to the hospital in late December struggling to breathe,
with a 102-degree fever and a cough that wouldn’t let up.
She
expected doctors to tell her she had pneumonia or bronchitis.
“They
were just like: ‘It’s just influenza A. It’s just what’s
going around,’” said Oktay, 49.
An
influenza A strain known as H3N2 is making people so ill in
California that thousands have shown up in recent weeks at hospitals
struggling to fight the infection.
“I
was flat on my back and in bed for 10 days,” said Oktay, who lives
in Palms. “This has been hands down the worst flu I’ve ever dealt
with.”
The
huge numbers of sick people are also straining hospital staff who are
confronting what could become California’s worst flu season in a
decade.
Hospitals
across the state are sending away ambulances, flying in nurses from
out of state and not letting children visit their loved ones for fear
they’ll spread the flu. Others are canceling surgeries and erecting
tents in their parking lots so they can triage the hordes of flu
patients.
“Those
are all creative things we wouldn’t typically do, but in a crisis
like this, we’re looking at,” said Michelle Gunnett, a nurse who
oversees emergency services for a Southern California hospital
system.
Staff
members at Torrance Memorial Medical Center have been working long
hours to care for a swell in sick patients that began in late
December, said Dr. James McKinnell, infectious disease specialist.
Some patients are incredibly ill with multiple strains of the flu, or
the flu and pneumonia.
“There’s
a little bit of a feeling of being in the trenches. we’re really
battling these infections to try to get them under control,”
McKinnell said. “We’re still not sure if this is going to
continue … but it certainly is an inauspicious start.”
So many people are showing up sick with the flu that Loma Linda hospital put up this giant tent to treat patients in.
Coping
with the crowds
Connie
Cunningham and her staff at Loma Linda University Medical Center were
triaging so many flu patients after New Year’s that they assembled
what looks like a giant, brown camping tent in their emergency room
parking lot. Several hospitals in California are treating flu
patients in so-called “surge tents” intended for major disasters.
On
a recent weekday morning, Cunningham walked through the tent, lined
with folding chairs and patient beds that are separated by sheets
hung from the ceiling.
Cunningham,
executive director for the hospital’s emergency services, said
she’d thought they would dismantle the tent after a few days, but
staff are still treating 60 more patients each day than usual, she
said.
“In
my career, I’ve never seen anything like this,” she said.
H3N2
is known for being more virulent than other strains of the flu. Since
October, 42 people in California younger than 65 have died of the
flu, compared with nine at the same time last year, according to
state officials. State officials collect flu death data only among
people under 65; the actual death toll from the flu is much higher.
Officials
say it’s unclear whether the recent upswing in cases means the
season is peaking early or this year’s season is just particularly
bad. Typically, the flu season, which runs from October through May,
reaches its height in February.
“It’s
like trying to surf a tsunami,” said Dr. Brian Johnston, an
emergency medicine doctor at White Memorial Medical Center in Boyle
Heights. “Maybe the wave has crested, one hopes.”
Palomar
Medical Center Escondido in northern San Diego County also pulled out
a flu tent this month, but was still so busy that some patients were
treated in the hallways, said Gunnett, a nurse who oversees their
emergency services.
Now
they’re running low on beds because many patients were admitted
with severe flu. Gunnett said she has started canceling scheduled
surgeries and turning single-patient rooms into doubles to free up
space.
At
Good Samaritan Hospital in San Jose, hospital staff noticed flu cases
were mounting and began clearing out an area that was being used as
storage.
“It
seems like we’re setting a record almost every day,” said Dr.
Dave Feldman, medical director of the emergency department.
On
Thursday, the former storage area opened as an extension of the
emergency room.
‘A
flu war zone’ in the emergency room
When
Candysse Miller took her 88-year-old father, who lives in Redlands,
to a nearby emergency room on Jan. 6, it was standing-room only. Many
people crammed in the small space were sneezing and violently
coughing, she said.
“It
was like a flu war zone,” said Miller, a writer. “I’m not a
germophobe or anything, but that will quickly make you one.”
Some
administrators at hospitals with long wait times and crowded ERs have
asked people who aren’t severely ill to not seek medical treatment.
Others concerned about the spread of illness within their walls have
also started restricting who can enter the hospital.
Dominican
Hospital in Santa Cruz recently reintroduced rules they hadn’t used
since the 2009 pandemic of swine flu, or H1N1. People under 16 —
who are considered more likely to spread the flu — aren’t allowed
to visit people at the hospital, and patients can have only one
visitor at a time, said hospital president Dr. Nanette Mickiewicz.
“As
we did during H1N1, we pulled out the same policies,” she said.
“We’ve been treating almost five times the number of influenza
patients that we typically see.”
Many
hospitals also say they’re too full to accept any more patients or
ambulances.
And
when paramedics are allowed to drop off patients at a hospital, the
emergency room is often so crowded that there aren’t available
staff members to transfer care to.
So the emergency responders can’t
get back on the road to answer incoming 911 calls, said Kay
Fruhwirth, L.A. County’s assistant director of emergency medical
services.
“If
there’s not a nurse available, and/or a bed — it’s usually an
‘and’ — they’re waiting there with the patient,” she said.
Healthy
people get sick too
Children,
elderly people and pregnant women are most at risk of becoming
extremely ill if they get the flu, but anyone can get very sick, said
McKinnell, of Torrance Memorial.
“We
have patients every year — young, healthy patients — that end up
in the hospital even on a ventilator for months because of
influenza,” he said. “It would be foolish for people to think,
‘I’m 40, I’m healthy, I don’t need to worry about influenza’
— that’s not true.”
Doctors
say that people who haven’t yet gotten the flu shot should still
get it. It takes about two weeks to take effect.
National
health officials predict the shot may only be 30% effective this
year, though the vaccine can reduce the severity and length of the
illness for those who get sick.
In
L.A. County alone, “even a 30% effectiveness rate can prevent
hundreds if not thousands of hospitalizations, and really save
lives,” said the county’s interim health officer Dr. Jeffrey
Gunzenhauser.
Already,
so many patients have ended up in the Torrance Memorial ICU with the
flu that caring for them has taken a toll on staff, McKinnell said.
“These
people come in very, very sick,” he said. “There’s a lot of
emotional stress that goes into that, because you care about your
patients, you really want them to survive.”
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