By Reese Oxner
Dozens of Texas hospitals have run out of intensive care unit beds as COVID-19 surges faster than any other time during the pandemic, propelled by the new delta variant.
The state is divided into 22 trauma service areas, and half of them reported 10 or fewer available ICU beds on Sunday. As more than 9,400 COVID-19 patients fill the state’s ICUs, which are reserved for the patients who are the sickest or most injured, the trauma service area that includes Laredo reported no available ICU beds, while the area that includes Abilene reported having one.
At least 53 Texas hospitals have no available ICU capacity, according to numbers reported to the federal government during the week ending Aug. 5. In Austin, five hospitals were at or above 90% of their ICU capacity during the same period, with two reporting no available ICU beds.
During the week ending on August 5, 53 Texas hospitals reported that their ICU beds were filled to capacity. Every week, the federal government releases the ICU capacity data reported by about 200 Texas hospitals with more than four ICU patients or four staffed ICU beds.
Note: Because data for hospitals with fewer than four patients or fewer than four staffed ICU adult beds is redacted, we cannot calculate the percentage of staffed ICU beds. About 200 out of the more than 400 Texas hospitals that reported data to the federal government have fewer than four staffed adult ICU beds at any given time.“This surge is by far the fastest and most aggressive that we’ve seen. Almost all of our hospitalizations are due to unvaccinated patients developing severe illness,” Dr. Desmar Walkes, Austin-Travis County’s health authority, told reporters last week. “ICU staff are seeing a younger population in our hospitals. Patients in the ICU are sicker and stay in the hospital longer than with prior surges, putting more strain on hospital resources.”
Around 87.1% of all hospital beds in Texas are in use — the highest level since the start of the pandemic — with 14.1% of those beds occupied by COVID-19 patients. When Gov. Greg Abbott began to relax some COVID-19 restrictions on businesses in October, his order maintained reduced restaurant capacity and kept bars closed in regions in which 15% or more of hospital beds were filled with COVID-19 patients.
The percentage of hospital beds in use across the state shows how the virus is currently impacting hospitals.
Source: Texas Department of State Health ServicesThis week, COVID-19 hospitalizations reached higher levels across the state than when Abbott imposed a statewide mask mandate in July 2020. Abbott has maintained that he will not be reviving the mask mandate and has barred local authorities from issuing their own.
“Governor Abbott has been clear that we must rely on personal responsibility, not government mandates,” Abbott press secretary Renae Eze said in a statement on Monday. “Every Texan has a right to choose for themselves and their children whether they will wear masks, open their businesses, or get vaccinated.”
Medical professionals are afraid that hospitals will become so overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients that they won’t have space for new patients — a situation that many hospitals faced during previous COVID surges.
“We need to make sure that there’s beds and hospitals and staff in hospitals available to take care of people who don’t just have COVID-19, but … all of those other conditions,” said Dr. Jennifer Shuford, chief state epidemiologist for the Texas Department of State Health Services. “As we see hospitalizations increasing at this rapid rate, we are afraid that we’re going to stress hospitals to the point that they can’t take care of some of those other people who are coming into the hospital for a stroke or a heart attack or any number of other things.”
Already, Shuford said she’s heard of hospitals that can’t accept patient transfers from other hospitals because they have no beds open.
Dr. David Callender, president, and CEO of Memorial Hermann Health System, a 17-hospital system spanning southeast Texas, said the “onslaught” of people hospitalized with COVID-19 during the recent surge could overwhelm its capacity if the current trend continues.
The system now has more than 800 people hospitalized with COVID-19, with nearly a third of its ICU beds occupied by COVID-19 patients, he said. At times, he said hospitals have had no pediatric ICU beds available and had to transport young patients across the state or even out of the state.
“Everybody who’s unvaccinated needs to get a vaccine,” he said. “That’s what will keep us out of those terrible situations where people need care in a hospital and they can’t get it.”
As of Saturday, 44.4% of Texans have been fully vaccinated. According to Becker’s Hospital Review, Texas ranks 37th nationally for the percentage of the eligible population vaccinated.
Walkes said vaccination is still the best hope for blunting the current COVID-19 surge.
“We don’t want you to be that person that has to choose a ventilator instead of a vaccine,” she said.
During the week ending on August 5, 53 Texas hospitals reported that their ICU beds were filled to capacity. Every week, the federal government releases the ICU capacity data reported by about 200 Texas hospitals with more than four ICU patients or four staffed ICU beds.
N/A: HHS redacted numbers from this hospital because it reported fewer than four staffed ICU beds, fewer than four patients occupying ICU beds, or both.
HOSPITAL |
ICU OCCUPANCY | AVERAGE ICU BEDS OCCUPIED | AVERAGE ICU BEDS AVAILABLE |
CHRISTUS SANTA ROSA – SAN MARCOS |
100% | 10 | 10 |
ASCENSION SETON HAYS 6001 Kyle Parkway, Kyle TX |
95.9% | 30.6 | 31.9 |
BAYLOR SCOTT & WHITE MEDICAL CENTER – BUDA 5330 Overpass Road Suite 110 Buda, TX |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
RESOLUTE HEALTH HOSPITAL 555 Creekside Crossing New Braunfels, TX 78130 |
67.8% |
11.6 |
17.1 |
PAM SPECIALTY HOSPITAL OF NEW BRAUNFELS 1445 Hanz Drive New Braunfels, TX 78130 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
NORTH AUSTIN MEDICAL CENTER 12221 MoPac Expressway North, Austin TX |
100% | 24 | 24 |
ASCENSION SETON NORTHWEST |
100% | 7.4 | 7.4 |
ASCENSION SETON MEDICAL CENTER AUSTIN 1201 W. 38th St. Austin, TX 78705 |
97% | 70 | 71.6 |
DELL SETON MED CENTER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TX 601 E 15th Street Austin, TX 78701 |
96.5% | 55.7 | 57.7 |
ST. DAVID’S MEDICAL CENTER 919 E 32nd St. Austin, TX 78705 |
93.9 | 46 | 49 |
ST. DAVID’S SOUTH AUSTIN MEDICAL CENTER 901 West Ben White Blvd. Austin, TX 78704 |
87.5 | 28 | 32 |
CORNERSTONE SPECIALTY HOSPITALS AUSTIN 4207 Burnet Rd. Austin, TX 78756 |
68.7% | 20.6 | 30 |
BAYLOR SCOTT & WHITE MEDICAL CENTER- AUSTIN 5245 W. U.S. 290 Austin, TX 78735 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
THE HOSPITAL AT WESTLAKE MEDICAL CENTER 5656 Bee Caves Road, Suite M-302 Austin, TX 78746 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
DELL CHILDREN’S MEDICAL CENTER OF CENTRAL TEXAS 4900 Mueller Blvd. Austin, TX 78723 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
NORTHWEST HILLS SURGICAL HOSPITAL 6818 Austin Ctr Blvd. Suite 100 Austin, TX 78731 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
ASCENSION SETON SOUTHWEST 7900 FM 1826 Austin, TX 78737 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
TEXAS NEURO REHABILITATION CENTER 1106 W. Dittmar Austin, TX 78745 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
ARISE AUSTIN MEDICAL CENTER 3003 Bee Caves Road Austin, TX 78746 |
N/A | N/A | N/A |
Carla Astudillo contributed to this report. This story originally published by the Texas Tribune.
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View Comments
Reese Oxner, the "journalist" who pumps out fear porn for NPR nationwide
(Not to mention the Texas Tribune 'About 45 degrees left of center' )
Mr. Oxner, we received your latest "science" telling us it's safer to submit, rather than be arrested.
Ten (10)! That's how many Rona-related deaths San Antonio tallied to their official COVID-19 Surveillance page last week. That is down 17% in one week. Hurray!
It is such good news I feel like we should review the stats for the last several weeks.
Reported on -- Deaths reported for the week:
* 9 Aug -- 10
* 2 Aug -- 12
*27 Jul -- 5
* 20 Jul -- 6
* 13 Jul -- 3
* 6 Jul -- 6
* 29 Jun -- 3
* 22 Jun -- 14
* 15 Jun -- 13
* 8 Jun -- 38
* 1 Jun -- 28
That is a total of 138 Rona-related deaths over the course of 70 days, in San Antonio. Less than 2 per day and holding reasonably steady. They can't even reinvestigate their way to an artificially high number. Even if they overruled 100% of those 67 cases and dumped them all on last week, it would barely crack double digit deaths per day.
What the hell are we doing here?
https://covid19.sanantonio.gov/Reports-Statistics/Dashboards-Data/Surveillance
Robert,
Number of deaths tends to lag behind hospitalizations. Hospitalizations in turn lags behind case count. This is because you don't immediately die from covid-19. It makes sense if you think about the progression of the disease: you get sick, eventually you go to the hospital, you spend weeks (perhaps) there, and then you die. The dying takes place weeks after initially getting the disease. We can anticipate deaths from this most recent wave to show up in the next few weeks.
... But we've been harping about the "Delta" variant for months now. The stats prove differently. Rona-1 had a near 100% survival rate. Rona-2.0 is even closer.
Summer school wasn't a problem. Camps weren't a problem. Why suddenly now?
I ain't buying it. Life has a 100% fatality rate if you are willing to wait long enough.