Canadian ICUs brace for COVID-19 resurgence on top of the flu - Action News
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Canadian ICUs brace for COVID-19 resurgence on top of the flu

Intensive care physicians and nurses share their concerns as they brace for an influx of patients that threatens to overwhelm hospitals due to the resurgence of the coronavirus and the flu.

'We're all worried about it,' says Dr. Bram Rochwerg at Hamilton's Juravinski Hospital

Medical staff work in the ICU of a COVID-19 3 hospital in Casal Palocco, near Rome, in April. The mortality rate in Italy was higher than in B.C.'s Lower Mainland and could be due to a variety of factors, doctors say. (Cecilia Fabiano/LaPresse/The Associated Press)

Intensive care physicians and nurses share their concerns as they brace for an influx of patients that threatens to overwhelm hospitals due to the resurgence of the coronavirus and the flu.

When Canadians successfully flattened epidemic curves during the summer, the goal was to prevent hospitals and intensive care units from facing a crush of too many patients with COVID-19 all at once. Health officials wanted to avoid what happened in hospitals in New York City, where refrigerated trailers were used as temporary morgues.

But the recent surge ofnew coronavirus cases in all provinces beyond Atlantic Canada has already thwarted surgery plans and led to the cancellation of surgeriessuch aship replacements at one hospital in Toronto and postponements in Edmonton.

Dr. Bram Rochwerg, an associate professor at McMaster University and critical care lead at the Juravinski Hospital in Hamilton, anticipates a surge of patients with COVID-19, and he worries they won't be able to accommodate them all as more surgeries resume.

Unlike in the spring, beds and crucial staffing need to be reserved for medical and surgery patients, too. Traditionally, autumn in hospitals means scrambling for health-care workers such asnurses and respiratory therapists to backfill those sick with the cold and flu or who need to stay home to care for sick children.

"We're all worried about it," Rochwerg said. "You see the provincial [COVID-19] numbers creep up day by day. We see that critical care numbers [of ICU patients]creep up."

Rochwerg said that fortunately, the number of critically ill patients in Hamilton is currently in the single digitsbut that the trend is headed in the wrong direction.

ICU nurse Patty Tamlin prepares to work with COVID-19 patients in Toronto. Cardiac arrests in hospital are now treated as protected code blues requiring full PPE, which can be fatiguing to wear. (Byron Piedad)

The challenge, hesaid, is to find a balance between adding restrictions to protect vulnerable populations such as residents in long-term care homes while preserving crucial aspects of society.

Lessonslearned

Rochwerg also pointed to several lessons physicians worldwide have learned to help take better care of patients critically ill with COVID-19 during the resurgence.

"We should treat them like we would any other patient," he said. "Sometimes, you just need [to insert] a breathing tube."

When patients are on a ventilator, it takes the skilled hands of four to six hospital staff, including a respiratory therapist who regularly checks the breathing set up and tubing to ensure the airway is protected, as well as nurses to safely turn or "prone" them onto the stomach to improve ventilation.

WATCH | Why trend in COVID-19 resurgence is concerning:

Anything beyond a small surge in ICU numbers will be challenging, says doctor

4 years ago
Duration 3:24
Intensive care physician Dr. Bram Rochwerg says he is concerned about the trend in intensive care unit admissions, and although hospitals may be able to handle a small surge, anything beyond that will become challenging.

The importance of getting patients up and out of bed, including those on ventilators when possible, as well as excellent nursing care and other day-to-day supportive care can't be minimized.

"Supportive care is not the sexy part of it, but it's so crucial," Rochwerg said.

It gives patients' bodies time to heal themselves, he said.

Fear offlood of sick patients

Patty Tamlin, a registered nurse working in critical care at a hospital in Toronto's east end, said she's also concerned about the coming cold-and-flu season.

"One of the biggest concerns is you may be overrun by patients," Tamlin said.

A close up of a person's arm, in a yellow sleeve with a blue latex glove, touching the chest of someone lying on a hospital bed.
A nurse tends to a patient suspected of having COVID-19 in the ICU at North York General Hospital in Toronto in May. It can take up to six staff to safely turn a patient on a ventilator onto their stomach. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Her message to Canadians? "Tell everyone to get their flu shot."

In the spring, the Ontario government created more beds for patients needing long-term ventilated care at a rehabilitation hospital. Even if administrators find more space for more beds, adding tempagency nursescan only go so far, she said.

"It's going to be a long time," Tamlin said. "It's fatiguing to have this constantly on our head all the time about COVID on top of our regular work."

Experience, though, has helped ICU staff to prepare for a resurgence of COVID-19 patients.

"The more you do something, the more comfortable you are with going in and out of a room,"for example, to perform CPR during a"protected code blue" for cardiac arrest when wearing full personal protective equipment, which can be exhausting. The masks, gowns and gloves need to be donnedand removed carefully to avoid health-care workers contaminating themselves.

Dr. EddyFan, medical director of the Extracorporeal Life Support (ECLS) program at Toronto's University Health Network, said the increase in COVID-19 cases so far is "manageable."

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is like an artificial heart and lung machine to support the sickest patients. People with COVID-19 who were intubated at hospitals across Ontario and didn't improve with conventional therapy were transported to Toronto General for ECMO.

Still, Fan said,"We're going to need to brace ourselves for another potential flood of very sick patients."

During the spring, patients were transferred to Toronto General,butfamily members could not visit. Fan said cutting off patients from their relatives harmed morale not only among loved ones, but it pained people working in the hospital, too.

Dr. Eddy Fan is medical director of the Extracorporeal Life Support program and a scientist at Toronto General Hospital Research Institute. Fan said doctors now recognize how similar COVID-19 is to other viral infections, as well as some important differences. (Submitted by Eddie Fan)

But influenza season also typically brings patients with lung failure who may need ECMO.

"Their families ask questions like 'they're dying of the flu?'" Fan said. "COVID is no different as a viral infection. We see even young patients come with very severe lung failure requiring ECMO."

During Toronto's first wave of COVID-19, the team successfully treated a 22-year-old with ECMO.

While respiratory failure from COVID-19 can resemble that of the flu, doctors say the scale is much larger.

Dr. Gregory Haljan, head of Surrey Memorial Hospital'scritical care departmentin British Columbia, said influenza has vaccines and medical treatments to shorten symptoms and improve death rates. COVID-19 doesn't, aside from corticosteroids for severe cases.

When Haljan and his co-authors across the Lower Mainland looked at 117 people with COVID-19 who were admitted to ICU between Feb. 20 and April 17, they found the mortality rate ranged from one in six to one in 10.

In comparison, the first studies from China and Italy showed mortality rates as high as one in two or one in three.

A clinician demonstrates how to use a device applied to the finger to monitor oxygen levels over a video conference. Virtual hospitals to keep patients safe at home help prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed by COVID-19 cases. (Submitted by Women's College Hospital)

Safety 'our primary focus'

Haljan credited having time to prepare, Dr. Bonnie Henry's "outstanding" leadership as the provincial health officer, the support of British Columbians, hard work and luck.

"We never got overwhelmed," hesaid.

To prevent being overwhelmed, Haljan said the hospital and its health region focused on basics, including:

  • Engagingpatients in the community and long-term care homes through a virtual hospital to keep patients safe at home.
  • Improvingcommunication with centralized repositories of information to avoid mixed messages.
  • Adapting as the science changes.

"It can be a challenge in that things change very, very slowly because safety is our primary focus," said Haljan, who works at one of the hospitals caring for among the highest volume of patients in the emergency department, according to the Canadian Institute for Health Information.

"Research is how we keep change safe."

Haljan said that includes research not onlyon vaccines and drugs but also measuring patterns and assessing them in areas such as delivering health services.

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