During second wave, they see financial, health needs for continuing procedures
In mid-March, as coronavirus spread through the state, New Hampshire hospitals prepared for the worst.
They paused all nonessential procedures to preserve inpatient beds and their limited amounts of personal protective equipment. Some of the most profitable services for hospitals, like surgeries and cardiac care, were paused for months.
The decision cost the state’s hospitals hundreds of millions of dollars.
The New Hampshire Hospital Association predicted hospitals in the state would lose $700 million by the end of the calendar year. Some hospitals, like Catholic Medical Center, had to furlough hundreds of staff members and lay off about 70 employees as a result.
“We did so because it was the right thing to do, but it has had disastrous financial consequences for hospitals all across New Hampshire,” Steve Ahnen, president of NHHA, wrote in a recent blog post.
Now, nearly eight months later, the state is seeing similar infection rates of Covid-19. This time, though, New Hampshire hospitals don’t plan on stopping elective procedures any time soon.
In many ways, hospitals say they are more prepared to handle a surge of patients this time around.
Personal
protective equipment, though more expensive than before the pandemic,
is more easily accessible. The science behind managing the virus has
been refined.
Hospitals have rigorous testing procedures in place to prevent the spread of the virus within facilities.
Nick
Larochelle, medical director of the Concord Hospital Emergency
Department, said the hospital has been using the last eight months to
devise policies to safely offer elective procedures during another surge
of Covid patients.
In November, that surge arrived.
Concord Hospital saw
the highest number of Covid patient admissions to the hospital since
May, Larochelle said. The hospital turned on negative pressure machines
to filter the air and imposed limitations on visitors. Larochelle said
there are no plans to delay non-Covid-related procedures, though.
Elective procedures
The plan to continue elective procedures isn’t all financial.
One
study from England estimated that when screening is delayed, as it has
been during the pandemic, there is a 10% reduction in five-year survival
for breast cancer and a 16% reduction in survival for colorectal
cancer. Another analysis predicted it could take three months to clear
the backlog of surgical cases in the country.
Greg
Baxter, chief clinical officer of SolutionHealth and president of
Elliot Health System, said that fact played a large role in their
decision to keep elective procedures running.
“You do have real instances of people who have had a delayed diagnosis,” he said.
“When
you put off a diagnostic test or procedure, some percentage of the time
your outcomes are not going to be as good as they would be with a more
timely diagnosis.”
Of course, these plans are subject to change. Hospital administrators almost obsessively watch the state’s daily numbers.
Baxter
says his staff has become experts at “toggling” between different
levels of service depending on the severity of Covid-19 cases in their
area.
“We’ve got some
muscle memory from the spring about how to shut things off and how to
turn them on again,” he said. “I’ve been doing this 20 years, and I
don’t know anyone who’s ever done that before.”
Baxter
said he feels confident the hospitals are more prepared now than they
were in the spring, but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t worry about the
impending spike.
“No
one knows whether in the next few weeks we’re going to see not a linear
rise in hospitalizations but an exponential rise,” he said. “If the
community is not a strong partner in this, we could rapidly find
ourselves with hospitalizations that will outstrip our resources.”
This article is being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information, visit collaborativenh.org.
When screening is delayed, there is a reduction in survival from common cancers.