• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Lost Prairie Press

Lost Prairie Press

Trending News from the Midwest - IA, IL, KS, MO, NE

  • Home
  • MIDWEST
  • ILLINOIS
  • IOWA
  • KANSAS
  • MISSOURI
  • NEBRASKA
  • About Us
    • Contact Us

Is Kansas City the next Springfield? Hospitals address concern over COVID-19 surge

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — As the delta variant of the COVID-19 virus ravages the state of Missouri, some are concerned hospitals won’t be ready for the influx of patients.

Springfield has recently become known as the epicenter of the virus, with cases rapidly increasing and the vaccination rate remaining low.

The CoxHealth hospital system in Springfield is starting to see the strain of the rising cases.

Just this past weekend, 27 people died of COVID-19 at its hospitals, and it had to expand morgue capacity.

A ventilator shortage was also an issue at the beginning of the month at Mercy Springfield Hospital.

Mercy is now requiring employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19, and that trend is spreading to the Kansas City area.

The City of Kansas City, Missouri, is discussing a vaccination requirement for all employees, and Jackson County will require vaccination or weekly testing for all its employees.

Some are worried the hospital trends could also spill into the region as virus cases start to climb in Kansas City.

Per the Mid-America Regional Council, metro-wide there were 139 new COVID hospitalizations yesterday (Tuesday 7/27), the highest one day total since January 26th. The daily average has essentially doubled in July, if it doubles again we’ll be above the peak we were at last winter

— Mayor Q (@QuintonLucasKC) July 28, 2021

During their daily morning call, University of Kansas Health System doctors were asked about any preparations for a hospital influx.

“We have more than 100 ICU beds… and most of our eyes see that they’re occupied because our overall census is so high,” Dr. Steven Stites, chief medical officer, said.

He said the issue is that once people are stabilized, they can be moved out of the ICU and onto other floors, but there isn’t a lot of room on other floors available for those COVID-19 patients.

Until there is more room in the ICU, they can’t put more people in the ICU. Right now, that health system is operating two COVID-19 ICUs.

“So where we are today, we can manage. The question is the following,” Stites said.

He said current numbers could be where we crest and then numbers decline, or it could just be a plateau and numbers could climb.

“That’s why I’m pushing it to bend the curve, and gosh darn it, if you really get 85% of people vaccinated and you get everybody wearing a mask and socially distancing, we will break the curve and the numbers will go back down,” Stites said.

Saint Luke’s Health System said they are fortunate to have four metro hospitals and five community hospitals so they can be flexible about managing capacity. They are not currently having capacity issues.

The system spokesperson said the hope is that more people will choose to be vaccinated so Kansas City doesn’t look like Springfield.

###[ad_2]
Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: KANSAS, kansas business - google

Primary Sidebar

More to See

7-things-to-do-this-weekend-in-kc:-may-19-22-2022

7 Things To Do This Weekend In KC: May 19-22 2022

Jacob Collier Jacob Collier is coming to The Truman this Thursday night. This event has been rescheduled from May 2020, and resellers seemed to have marked up ticket prices quite a bit. But trust … [Read More...] about 7 Things To Do This Weekend In KC: May 19-22 2022

City welcomes new chief human resources officer

Posted on May 19, 2022 The City of Overland Park welcomes a new Human Resources Department leader, following a national search. Thomas Bledsoe comes to the City from … [Read More...] about City welcomes new chief human resources officer

korean-street-food-and-house-brewed-soju-coming-to-westport

Korean street food and house-brewed soju coming to Westport

Food from the upcoming Westport Korean restaurant Chingu/Photo by Alyssa Broadu Chingu, a new Westport spot from the team behind Sura eats, will combine Korean street food and soju … [Read More...] about Korean street food and house-brewed soju coming to Westport

a-recent-trip-to-new-york-reminded-me-just-how-much-kansas-city-jazz-has-to-offer

A recent trip to New York reminded me just how much Kansas City jazz has to offer

Photography by Caleb Condit & Rebecca Norden “There’s a common myth that Kansas City jazz ended with World War II,” local jazz historian and author Chuck Haddix says. While the … [Read More...] about A recent trip to New York reminded me just how much Kansas City jazz has to offer

a-local-group-works-with-survivors-of-violence-to-break-the-cycle

A local group works with survivors of violence to break the cycle

Illustration by Makalah Hardy Almost every day, Marquell Harris visits two hospitals: Research Medical Center and Truman. And almost every day, he sees new survivors of gunshot … [Read More...] about A local group works with survivors of violence to break the cycle

Footer

WELCOME!

Thanks for visiting Lost Prairie Press!

We hope you’ll enjoy news and perspective from the Midwest – specifically, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas and Missouri.

About/Contact

Privacy Policy

Recent

  • 7 Things To Do This Weekend In KC: May 19-22 2022
  • City welcomes new chief human resources officer
  • Korean street food and house-brewed soju coming to Westport

Search

Copyright © 2022 · Lost Prairie Press