New York City’s hospitalization rate more than doubled during the past two weeks — with the number of patients suspected of suffering from COVID-19 spiking “intensely,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said Monday.
The most recent data show the seven-day average number of people hospitalized per 100,000 hit 3.7 on Christmas Day, up from fewer than 1.5 on Dec. 12, according to a chart the mayor displayed during a remote briefing from City Hall.
De Blasio said 296 patients in hospital beds were believed to be infected with the coronavirus amid the ongoing spread of the highly transmissible Omicron variant.
“So, this has just gone up intensely,” he said.
De Blasio also said the latest daily report showed 17,343 new positive test results in the city, which he called a “staggering figure” that should serve as “a powerful, powerful reminder — once again — to get everyone vaccinated, everyone boosted as quickly as possible.”
Statewide, hospitalizations surged 11 percent in just one day, from 4,891 on Christmas to 5,526 on Sunday, Gov. Kathy Hochul said.
A regional breakdown showed New York City leading the state in new hospital admissions, with more than 1,800 on Friday, compared to about 1,000 on Dec. 18, according to state Health Department figures.
Meanwhile, the Big Apple also had the highest positivity rate — 262 per 100,000 tests — followed by Long Island, with a rate of 221 per 100,000.
Statewide, the rate was 181 per 100,000, with Buffalo and the western New York region averaging just 69 per 100,000.
Before Omicron struck, New York City had the state’s lowest positivity rate while upstate areas were struggling with new cases.
Both de Blasio and Hochul tried to downplay the surge in hospitalizations by comparing it to previous waves of the pandemic, with the mayor saying that “our hospitals are doing remarkably well.”
“We have real challenges but what’s striking is how different, thank God — how different the Omicron experience is than even last winter, let alone the spring of 2020,” he said.
John D’Angelo of Northwell Health, the state’s largest hospital network, called its COVID-19 caseload “manageable,” with 771 on Sunday, up from 594 on Friday.
By comparison, Northwell was treating 1,082 COVID-19 patients on Dec. 27, 2020, said D’Angelo, a senior vice president and the chairman of emergency management.
The percentage of patients undergoing intensive care was at 9 percent, down from 16 percent in December 2020 and 26 percent in April 2020, he said.
About 90 percent of patients in the intensive care units are unvaccinated, D’Angelo said.
“Our best guess is the number of cases will peak in mid-January and then go on a downward slope,” he said.
D’Angelo said Northwell’s “biggest challenge is keeping the staff healthy,” with about 1,200 of its 78,000 employees out sick or in isolation.
The network has 1,200 “flex” nurses and other staffers who can be reassigned to make up for shortages also has contracts with several hundred fill-in workers, he said.
But Dr. Ayman El-Mohandes, dean of the City University of New York Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy in Manhattan, said the latest figures were worrisome.
“Our health care system is not designed to operate in emergency mode all the time,” he said.
“We need to protect our health care system and our communities.”
El-Mohandes said the predominance of COVID cases, even if they’re not as severe as during prior outbreaks, threatened to keep other people from seeking or getting the medical treatment they need for other illnesses.
El-Mohandes also called for a deeper dive into the hospitalization data, saying he suspects that many of the sickest patients haven’t been vaccinated.
Post a Comment