https://boston.cbslocal.com/2021/11/17/boston-medflight-out-of-state-hospitals/
BOSTON (CBS) – Some critically ill patients onboard Boston MedFlight helicopters — bound for one of the city’s several hospitals — have flown into a harsh reality of late. No available ICU beds.
“That’s happened half a dozen times in the last 10 days,” says Boston MedFlight CEO Maura Hughes.
Instead, they went to hospitals in neighboring states — Rhode Island, Connecticut and New Hampshire.
“It’s not a great solution,” Hughes says, “particularly for the patient’s family, when you tell them ‘Yes, we have a bed. But it’s in Connecticut.”
Boston MedFlight — a non-profit that shuttled 5,700 patients last year by chopper, plane and ground ambulance — is calling attention to the troublesome “perfect storm” that’s filling local hospital beds — and not just in the intensive care ward.
Experts say Covid-19 is a fraction of the problem — but not the problem itself.
For starters, Boston MedFlight is carrying much sicker patients these days — and more of them — because so many people put off getting medical care for their health issues during the pandemic.
“What we’re seeing,” says CEO Hughes, “is a high volume of critically ill patients.”
The second factor is seriously understaffed hospitals. Almost one-in-five healthcare workers have quit since the spring of 2020 — half a million this past August alone — according to the US Labor Department.
And third, there’s the mental health crisis — with hospitals finding themselves, unfortunately — on the front lines.
“The emergency rooms are taking care of those patients,” says Hughes, “but they really need psychiatric care not medical care.”
Funny how all these critically ill patients managed to manage their prior health problems for nearly two years, until the vaxx reactions began to kick in.