Cornwall hospital limiting surgeries due to rising COVID-19 cases - Action News
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Cornwall hospital limiting surgeries due to rising COVID-19 cases

Hundreds of surgeriesarebeing put on hold once again as rising numbers of COVID-19 patients have forced the Cornwall Community Hospital to close operating rooms.

CCH only doing urgent and high-priority elective surgeries over the coming weeks

Non-urgent surgeries have been temporarily put on hold at the Cornwall Community Hospital because of an influx of COVID-19 patients requiring hospitalization. (Cornwall Community Hospital/Facebook)

Hundreds of surgeries in Cornwall, Ont.,arebeing put on hold once again as rising numbers of COVID-19 patients have forced the city's hospital to close operating rooms.

In a release issued Wednesday, officials with the Cornwall Community Hospital (CCH) said only life-threatening cancer cases and other high-priority surgeries will go aheadover the coming weeks.

"We are doing this to ourselves for self-preservation of the hospital," said Dr. Garry Weinberg, chief of surgery at CCH.

Weinberg said postponing non-urgent surgeries will allow the hospital to reserve beds and resources for emergency cases as more and more COVID-19 patients need to be hospitalized.

Cornwall hassome of the highest positivity ratesand the lowest vaccination ratesin Ontario. Just 69 per cent of eligible people are fully vaccinated in some neighbourhoods.

"Unfortunately, it's the surgeries and the patients who need those surgeries that are taking the hit for the community," said Weinberg.

Lowest vaccine rates in province

According to Weinberg, the hospital, which was already overcapacity in September, isnow "much beyond that."

There are19 COVID-19patients inhospital right now,13 of which require intensive care. More than half of all cases at CCH are unvaccinated.

The issue, Weinberg said, is that COVID-19 cases require longer hospital stays than the average patient. While common problems can be stabilized within two to five days, COVID-19 patients takeroughly two weeks on average from admission to discharge, a lack of flow that"cannot continue," Weinberg said.

"We simply could not continue running the ORif there's no place to put patients post-operatively," he said.

Many nurses and health-care staff at the hospital are also burned out, sick, or redeployed to other units, Weinberg said.

Outbreaks in Cornwall are also preventing the safe transfer of a large number of patients in hospital beds to community care facilities, many of which are also struggling with staffing shortages, according to hospital officials.

Situation could have been avoided, say officials

This is the third time in the last 18 months thatsurgeries have been rescheduled at the hospital. Twice before it wasbecause of provincially mandated shutdowns, but this is the first time CCHhas chosen to postpone its own surgeries.

"That's very disheartening to have to tell patients that," Weinberg said.

Both Weinberg and Dr. Paul Roumeliotis, medical officer of health for the Eastern Ontario Health Unit, said the current situation could mostly have beenavoided if more locals gotvaccinated.

"Not only will that [unvaccinated]individual, you know, have higher rates of complications, including hospitalization and ICU admission, but [unvaccinated people] will also overwhelm our health-care services," Roumeliotissaid during a media briefing Wednesday.

Affected patientswith scheduled surgeries in the coming days will be contacted by CCH staff. Weinberg said the aim is to return to a normal operating schedule in two weeks.