HILO — The largest hospital on the Big Island of Hawaii was operating at about 120% of capacity amid a surge in COVID-19 cases, straining employees and supplies.
HILO — The largest hospital on the Big Island of Hawaii was operating at about 120% of capacity amid a surge in COVID-19 cases, straining employees and supplies.
Hilo Medical Center had 38 patients with coronavirus, including 10 in the intensive care unit, the Hawaii Tribune-Herald reported Tuesday.
Altogether the hospital had 17 ICU Patients, far beyond its normal 11-bed ICU capacity. Some ICU patients were being treated in the progressive care unit.
“As the largest hospital on the island, we cannot divert patients,” hospital spokeswoman Elena Cabatu said. “We have a plan to care for everyone who come to us for care.”
On Friday, the hospital opened a 16-bed overflow unit in its extended care facility.
Cabatu said the hospital was constantly assessing its campus for locations in which to care for patients.
Two dozen traveling nurses have arrived to help, but the vast majority of the work has been assumed by hospital staff, said Dan Brinkman, the East Hawaii Regional CEO for Hawaii Health Systems Corp.
The seven-day average of new COVID-19 on the Big Island soared from 2.7 on July 4 to 138 on Tuesday. Sixty percent of the population has been fully vaccinated.
What percentage of the new cases, and if the hospitalized cases are fully vaccinated? The 60% number only relates to the total population of people living in the island. We need this data to understand the value of a vaccine.