JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Monday, May 19, 2025

COVID ICUs at capacity, only 3 beds remaining

by

Rishard Khan
1301 days ago
20211025
Flashback June: A patient is taken from a GMR ambulance into the Caura Hospital, Caura Road, El Dorado.

Flashback June: A patient is taken from a GMR ambulance into the Caura Hospital, Caura Road, El Dorado.

ABRAHAM DIAZ

There were on­ly three more In­ten­sive Care Unit (ICU) spaces avail­able in the par­al­lel health­care sys­tem in Trinidad and To­ba­go for COVID-19 pa­tients as of Mon­day morn­ing. The rev­e­la­tion comes just two days af­ter the Min­is­ter of Health warned that the coun­try was on the verge of run­ning out of space to pro­vide this lev­el of crit­i­cal treat­ment to pa­tients. He al­so cau­tioned that doc­tors will be forced to de­cide who re­ceives treat­ment.

And that al­ready ap­pears to be in mo­tion as nine pa­tients in need of ICU care in the par­al­lel health­care sys­tem are yet to be trans­ferred be­cause of the lack of space.

Speak­ing at the min­istry’s vir­tu­al press con­fer­ence on Mon­day, Prin­ci­pal Med­ical Of­fi­cer of In­sti­tu­tions Dr Maryam Ab­dool-Richards said 54 of the 57 ICU beds in the par­al­lel health­care sys­tem were oc­cu­pied. This is de­spite the sys­tem hav­ing some 30 per cent more ICU ca­pac­i­ty than it did when this cur­rent wave of in­fec­tions be­gan.

“The In­ten­sive Care Unit in our coun­try has now out­stripped or is equal to the sup­ply of beds,” she said.

This phased in­crease, she said, was part of the min­istry’s prepa­ra­tion for the ar­rival of the more in­fec­tious and dead­lier Delta vari­ant. The most re­cent ex­pan­sion came over the week­end when two ICU beds were added to the Ari­ma Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal. How­ev­er, by yes­ter­day morn­ing, they were filled.

The sole re­main­ing ICU space in Trinidad as of yes­ter­day morn­ing was at the Au­gus­tus Long Hos­pi­tal. The oth­er two spaces are in To­ba­go.

She re­vealed that there were al­so nine COVID-19 pa­tients re­ceiv­ing ICU care at the Ac­ci­dent and Emer­gency De­part­ments of hos­pi­tals in the tra­di­tion­al health­care sys­tem await­ing trans­fer in­to a COVID-19 fa­cil­i­ty.

“As of 8.30 am this morn­ing, there were 27 se­vere­ly and crit­i­cal­ly ill COVID-19 pa­tients await­ing trans­fer in­to the Par­al­lel Health­care Sys­tem. Of those, nine pa­tients—rep­re­sent­ing 33 per cent—were of ICU or In­ten­sive Care Unit lev­el,” she said.

None of these pa­tients, she said, are ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed.

In fact, Dr Ab­dool-Richards said 96 per cent of the pa­tients cur­rent­ly fight­ing for life in Trinidad’s ICUs are not ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed. This means just two pa­tients were ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed while the oth­er 52 were un­vac­ci­nat­ed. She added that 94.1 per cent of all hos­pi­talised COVID-19 pa­tients be­tween Ju­ly 22 and Oc­to­ber 6 were al­so un­vac­ci­nat­ed.

She said the min­istry is work­ing to in­crease ca­pac­i­ty but ad­mit­ted the con­tin­gency does not al­low for a sig­nif­i­cant bed in­crease due to re­source con­straints such as med­ical staff to tend to the pa­tients.

Guardian Me­dia un­der­stands the con­tin­gency can fa­cil­i­tate the ad­di­tion of around sev­en beds.

“We have been try­ing to in­crease ca­pac­i­ty for ICU beds based on the de­mand, based on pre­pared­ness for the Delta vari­ant but a bed is not just a bed,” she said.

“These beds re­quire staff, equip­ment and many oth­er fac­tors. We have to con­sid­er the am­bu­lance trans­fer sys­tem as well to trans­port these crit­i­cal­ly ill pa­tients.”

It is not the first time the par­al­lel health­care sys­tem has come un­der se­vere pres­sure and strain ow­ing to the num­ber of COVID cas­es in the coun­try.

In May, the par­al­lel health­care sys­tem was out of beds, as all avail­able beds at the then sev­en fa­cil­i­ties were oc­cu­pied with ill pa­tients re­quir­ing hos­pi­tal­i­sa­tion.

Back then the ICU was at full ca­pac­i­ty, with the HDU near­ing ca­pac­i­ty.

But yes­ter­day, Dr Ab­dool-Richards warned the sit­u­a­tion could be avoid­ed as she urged peo­ple to get vac­ci­nat­ed to pre­vent hos­pi­tal­i­sa­tion.

“Vac­ci­na­tion re­duces the risk of you ac­quir­ing the COVID-19 virus, vac­ci­na­tion re­duces the risk of you spread­ing the COVID-19 virus es­pe­cial­ly to vul­ner­a­ble per­sons and vac­ci­na­tion re­duces the risk of you be­ing hos­pi­talised and re­quir­ing In­ten­sive Care Unit treat­ment,” she said.

Dr Hinds warns there could be an­oth­er spike in COVID cas­es

Apart from low vac­ci­na­tion num­bers, a source fa­mil­iar with the sit­u­a­tion ex­plained to Guardian Me­dia that the Delta vari­ant was lead­ing to more se­vere in­fec­tions in some pa­tients mean­ing they would, in turn, re­quire a high­er lev­el of care. The source al­so ex­plained that peo­ple were wait­ing too long be­fore seek­ing med­ical at­ten­tion which meant a high­er lev­el of care need­ed to be ad­min­is­tered.

Com­pound­ing the is­sue of ICU over­crowd­ing is the rev­e­la­tion by the min­istry’s Epi­demi­ol­o­gy Di­vi­sion’s tech­ni­cal di­rec­tor, Dr Av­ery Hinds, that cas­es ap­pear to be in­creas­ing around the coun­try.

“We’re be­gin­ning to see week on week in­creas­es as op­posed to the fluc­tu­a­tion we were see­ing be­fore,” he said.

Dr Hinds said if the coun­try con­tin­ued to record over 200 cas­es per day, Oc­to­ber is set to have the largest num­ber of month­ly con­firmed cas­es than each of the pre­vi­ous three months.

“We’re sound­ing the alarm that there may be in­creas­ing rates of trans­mis­sion we have to keep an eye on. We need to ad­here to those pub­lic health reg­u­la­tions even as we move around more, en­gage more in var­i­ous ac­tiv­i­ties and, def­i­nite­ly, we need to en­sure both the pro­tec­tion of our­selves and those around us by mak­ing use of the avail­able vac­ci­na­tions,” he said.

Dr Hinds said if the pop­u­la­tion does not take heed now, there could be an­oth­er spike in cas­es.

“We are be­gin­ning to no­tice very small changes in trend and those small changes, if we aren’t ap­ply­ing all the oth­er brak­ing fac­tors, can, of course, mul­ti­ply in rate as time goes on- spawn­ing an­oth­er wave,” he said.

“What we are very much hop­ing is that the be­hav­iour of the pop­u­la­tion in terms of vac­cine up­take, in terms of ad­her­ing to all of the reg­u­la­tions, in terms of not breach­ing the guide­lines around par­tic­i­pa­tion in group ac­tiv­i­ties- all of those fac­tors will help to slow the pos­si­bil­i­ty of an in­creased rate of trans­mis­sion,” Dr Hinds added.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored