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As COVID-19 surges, many health care facilities halt non-urgent procedures, rely on National Guard

As COVID-19 surges, many health care facilities halt non-urgent procedures, rely on National Guard
A RECORD HIGH. WISCONSIN HOSPITALS ARE OVERWHELMED BY THE LATEST ROUND OF COVID-19, WHICH HAS SICKENED AND SIDELINED MEDICAL WORKERS TOO. THE GOVNOERR ANNOUNCED THURSDAY 50 NATIONAL GUARD MEMBERS ARE ALREADY DEPLOYED TO A HALF-DOZEN NU RSING HOMES AROUND THE STATE WITH ANOTHER 160 ARRIVGIN WITHIN WEEKS TO HELP AT HOSPITALS AND ADDITIONAL NURSING HOMES. WE WILL BE PARTNERING WITH MADISON COLLEGE TO HELP TRAIN ME ERMBS OF THE WISCONSIN NATIONAL GUARD AS CERTIFIED NURSING. SUBSTANCE TO BRING STAFFING RELIEF TO WISCONSIN바카라 게임 웹사이트S CARE FACILITIES. THE GUARD MEMBERS ARE RECEIVING ACCELERATED TRAINING AS CERTIFIED NURSINGSS AISTANTS UNDER AN EMERGENCY PROGRAM A GROUP OF ABOUT 80 STARTED TRAINING THIS WEEK TO DEPLOY AT THE END OF JANUARY ANOTHER 80 WILL SRTTA TRAINING IN EARLY FEBRUARY TO DEPLOY BY THE END OF NEXTONTH M THROUGH A SHORTER TERM INITIALLY ONLEIN COURSE FOLLOWED BY IN-PERSON TRAINING WE CAN GET PEOPLE READY TO GO. VOTE AND WORK SAFELY IN IN THESE SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES WITH THE OVERSIGHT OF A REGISTERED NURSE. WE바카라 게임 웹사이트RE ESTIMATING THE FIRST ROUND OF STAFFING RELIEF WILL ALLOW SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES TO OPEN UP 200 OR MORE BEDS BY THE END OF FEBRUARY THOSE BEDS WILL SERVE PATIENTS WHO ARE RECOVERING FROM BEING SERIOUSLY ILL SO HOSPITALS CAN BETTER TREAT THOSE NEEDING MORE ACUTE CA RE TERRY SATER WI SN 12 NEWS. THE STATE HAS NOT RELEASE
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As COVID-19 surges, many health care facilities halt non-urgent procedures, rely on National Guard
As COVID-19 hospitalizations reach new highs, more states and health care systems are cutting back services that aren't urgent and relying on National Guard personnel to fill staffing gaps as infected health care employees miss work to recover and patient demand grows.While officials have started to call out very early signs that the omicron coronavirus wave is peaking 바카라 게임 웹사이트 or at least plateauing 바카라 게임 웹사이트 in parts of the Northeast, experts say it will be weeks before any change can be declared a trend. Until then, the surge has put frontline workers in the medical industry and others at higher risk.More than 155,900 Americans are hospitalized with COVID-19, according to data Thursday from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, surpassing records set in last winter's surge. And hospitals need more people to help provide care.Meantime, deaths nationally have lagged from the worst of last winter's surge, as the country has averaged 1,817 COVID-19 deaths a day over the past week, Johns Hopkins University data shows. The peak daily average was 3,402 one year ago on Jan. 13, 2021.In Washington state, hospitals will temporarily halt nonurgent procedures "so as much capacity and staff can be dedicated to emergent needs 바카라 게임 웹사이트 the people who need this right now," Gov. Jay Inslee said Thursday.In Wisconsin, National Guard members will be trained as certified nursing assistants to support hospitals and nursing homes, Gov. Tony Evers said."We're estimating the first round of staffing and relief rollout will allow skilled nursing facilities to open up 200 or more beds by the end of February," Evers said Thursday as the state announced a record number of confirmed cases."Our health care providers are beyond exhausted. We simply do not have enough staff to care for all those who are ill," said Lisa Greenwood, the associate dean of nursing at Madison College, which is training the Guard members.Nineteen states reported less than 15% remaining capacity in their intensive care units, according to HHS data Thursday: Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas and Vermont.Schools are also feeling the squeezeSince the emergence six weeks ago in the U.S. of omicron 바카라 게임 웹사이트 which complicated an ongoing surge from the delta variant 바카라 게임 웹사이트 states have been leaning on military and federal emergency teams to backstop staff absences.Before New Year's, states such as Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and New York called upon Guard members to assist with medical and nonmedical tasks.In Ohio, more than 2,000 Guard members have been deployed as cases keep rising. Now, with hospitalizations at an all-time high, officials are urging residents to protect themselves from infection."In this omicron surge, you need to remember no one is untouchable," state health department director Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff said Thursday, asking people to only go to the hospital in the case of a real emergency as staffing shortages remain critical.Tracking the omicron surgeOmicron will 'find just about everybody,' but vaccinated people will still fare better, Fauci saysHealth officials are urging you to rethink your face covering and upgrade masks Supreme Court blocks COVID-19 vaccine and testing mandate for US businesses Why are so many vaccinated people getting COVID-19 lately? COVID-19 test kits you can use at home for you and your family More federally deployed medical teams will head soon to six states 바카라 게임 웹사이트 Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island 바카라 게임 웹사이트 to help hospitals combat COVID-19, President Joe Biden announced Thursday.Biden announced plans last month to mobilize 1,000 additional military medical personnel to help overwhelmed hospitals.Assistance needed with staffing is not limited to health care facilities. Many school districts have weighed with difficult decisions about the return to in-person learning after the holidays, and the surge has impacted educational staffing.Major schools districts from New Mexico to Pennsylvania have halted in-person learning because of high COVID-19 case rates and teacher absences. Even New York City officials are consider a temporary remote learning option, less than a week after saying virtual lessons had not been effective earlier in the pandemic.Montgomery County Public Schools, the largest school district in Maryland, submitted a formal inquiry for help from the National Guard to address its school bus driver shortage, district spokesperson Chris Cram told CNN on Thursday. Earlier this week, nearly 100 of the district's school bus routes were impacted by the shortage of drivers, but that number is now down to 29 routes as of Thursday, Cram said.Testing problems are still in playWhile health experts are hopeful the surge may soon wane, the sheer volume of infections continues nationwide. Confirmed positive cases of COVID-19 have climbed to a daily average of 771,580 in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University data, more than three times that of last winter's peak average.Mitigating COVID-19 transmission remains paramount, and officials are working to overcome a shortage of COVID-19 rapid tests so that those who are asymptomatic can know to quarantine.In Nevada, state officials have ordered more than a half-million at-home antigen test kits that will be made available at no cost and will be distributed near the end of the month through "community partners" to be named later, Gov. Steve Sisolak announced Thursday."This will ensure that, as we live with COVID, the supply chain does not dictate access for Nevadans," Sisolak said.However, not all confirmed cases via rapid test are tracked and recorded, meaning the numbers of those with COVID-19 may be much higher.The omicron variant has become so widespread in Oregon, it is outpacing health leaders' ability to keep track of how many people are infected, they said."We know our daily case counts are missing many at-home test results, and in the face of the highly transmissible omicron variant, case data is also missing many undiagnosed cases, as well," Oregon Health Authority Director Patrick Allen said in a briefing Thursday."To be completely transparent, we are likely approaching the maximum capacity our testing system has to identify cases."Instead of interviewing people for contact tracing, health teams will turn their focusing to tracking outbreaks in high-risk settings, asking those with positive test results to report them to the state voluntarily through a website and hotline, Allen said."Hospitalizations and deaths will continue to represent our most reliable and significant metric," Allen said.

As COVID-19 hospitalizations reach new highs, more states and health care systems are cutting back services that aren't urgent and relying on National Guard personnel to fill staffing gaps as infected health care employees miss work to recover and patient demand grows.

While officials have started to call out very early signs that the omicron coronavirus wave is peaking 바카라 게임 웹사이트 or at least plateauing 바카라 게임 웹사이트 in parts of the Northeast, experts say it will be weeks before any change can be declared a trend. Until then, the surge has put frontline workers in the medical industry and others at higher risk.

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More than 155,900 Americans are hospitalized with COVID-19, data Thursday from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, surpassing records set in last winter's surge. And hospitals need more people to help provide care.

Meantime, deaths nationally have lagged from the worst of last winter's surge, as the country has averaged 1,817 COVID-19 deaths a day over the past week, Johns Hopkins University data shows. The peak daily average was 3,402 one year ago on Jan. 13, 2021.

In Washington state, hospitals will temporarily halt nonurgent procedures "so as much capacity and staff can be dedicated to emergent needs 바카라 게임 웹사이트 the people who need this right now," Gov. Jay Inslee said Thursday.

In Wisconsin, National Guard members will be trained as certified nursing assistants to support hospitals and nursing homes, Gov. Tony Evers said.

"We're estimating the first round of staffing and relief rollout will allow skilled nursing facilities to open up 200 or more beds by the end of February," Evers said Thursday as the state announced a record number of confirmed cases.

"Our health care providers are beyond exhausted. We simply do not have enough staff to care for all those who are ill," said Lisa Greenwood, the associate dean of nursing at Madison College, which is training the Guard members.

Nineteen states reported less than 15% remaining capacity in their intensive care units, according to HHS data Thursday: Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas and Vermont.

Schools are also feeling the squeeze

Since the emergence six weeks ago in the U.S. of omicron 바카라 게임 웹사이트 which complicated an ongoing surge from the delta variant 바카라 게임 웹사이트 states have been leaning on to backstop staff absences.

Before New Year's, states such as Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and New York called upon Guard members to assist with medical and nonmedical tasks.

In Ohio, more than 2,000 Guard members have been deployed as cases keep rising. Now, with hospitalizations at an all-time high, officials are urging residents to protect themselves from infection.

"In this omicron surge, you need to remember no one is untouchable," state health department director Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff said Thursday, asking people to only go to the hospital in the case of a real emergency as staffing shortages remain critical.

Tracking the omicron surge

More federally deployed medical teams will head soon to six states 바카라 게임 웹사이트 Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island 바카라 게임 웹사이트 to help hospitals combat COVID-19, President Joe Biden announced Thursday.

Biden announced plans last month to mobilize 1,000 additional military medical personnel to help overwhelmed hospitals.

Assistance needed with staffing is not limited to health care facilities. Many school districts have weighed with difficult decisions about the return to in-person learning after the holidays, and the surge has impacted educational staffing.

Major schools districts from New Mexico to Pennsylvania have halted in-person learning because of high COVID-19 case rates and teacher absences. Even New York City officials are consider a temporary remote learning option, less than a week after saying virtual lessons had not been effective earlier in the pandemic.

Montgomery County Public Schools, the largest school district in Maryland, submitted a formal inquiry for help from the National Guard to address its school bus driver shortage, district spokesperson Chris Cram told CNN on Thursday. Earlier this week, nearly 100 of the district's school bus routes were impacted by the shortage of drivers, but that number is now down to 29 routes as of Thursday, Cram said.

Testing problems are still in play

While health experts are hopeful the surge may soon wane, the sheer volume of infections continues nationwide. Confirmed positive cases of COVID-19 have climbed to a daily average of 771,580 in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University data, more than three times that of last winter's peak average.

Mitigating COVID-19 transmission remains paramount, and officials are working to overcome a shortage of COVID-19 rapid tests so that those who are asymptomatic can know to quarantine.

In Nevada, state officials have ordered more than a half-million at-home antigen test kits that will be made available at no cost and will be distributed near the end of the month through "community partners" to be named later, Gov. Steve Sisolak announced Thursday.

"This will ensure that, as we live with COVID, the supply chain does not dictate access for Nevadans," Sisolak said.

However, not all confirmed cases via rapid test are tracked and recorded, meaning the numbers of those with COVID-19 may be much higher.

The omicron variant has become so widespread in Oregon, it is outpacing health leaders' ability to keep track of how many people are infected, they said.

"We know our daily case counts are missing many at-home test results, and in the face of the highly transmissible omicron variant, case data is also missing many undiagnosed cases, as well," Oregon Health Authority Director Patrick Allen said in a briefing Thursday.

"To be completely transparent, we are likely approaching the maximum capacity our testing system has to identify cases."

Instead of interviewing people for contact tracing, health teams will turn their focusing to tracking outbreaks in high-risk settings, asking those with positive test results to report them to the state voluntarily through a website and hotline, Allen said.

"Hospitalizations and deaths will continue to represent our most reliable and significant metric," Allen said.