Arizona health director Dr. Cara Christ said the data on inpatient beds and ICU beds show that over 25% of both ICU beds and inpatient beds statewide are currently available.
Arizona hospitals appear to have enough beds and ventilators to handle an anticipated surge in COVID-19 patients, new data and analysis shows.
Since Arizona began to see its first infections from the virus that causes COVID-19 in March, the publicβs concern has been mostly about whether the state has enough hospital beds and ventilators for patients that might need them.
This is a shift from late March, when Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey ordered the stateβs hospitals to come up with plans to increase bed capacity by 50% within the next month, and to have half of those new beds ready by April 10.
Duceyβs executive order came a day after state health director Dr. Cara Christ said the number of hospital beds at the time was unlikely to meet the anticipated need of this first surge, expected to come toward the end of April.
The state at that time also did not know how many ventilators were in circulation because reporting by hospitals was not mandatory. At one point earlier in March, Christ said there were only 172 ventilators known to the state, with 100% of those in use at the time.
Christ announced on Wednesday, April 15, that of the 1,500 ventilators they now know are in Arizonaβs hospitals, 75% are available, with COVID-19 patients accounting for 50% of the ones that are currently in use.
This is considerably more reassuring, she said. However, depending on the surge and how many people become seriously ill, more ventilators may still be needed.
Christ said thatβs something the state is monitoring regularly.
A new statewide hospital reporting dashboard shows the number of beds available and in use by day, the number of ventilators available and in use by day, and other hospitalization data specific to COVID-19.
With more data available and a better grasp on how the virus is spreading here based on emergency-room visits and hospital admissions, predictions about hospital capacity are also more positive.
Dr. Joe K. Gerald, an associate professor with the UAβs Zuckerman College of Public Health, has been analyzing related data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IMHE) and, in recent days, found Arizonaβs bed capacity adequate.
There are a couple of reasons for that, he explains.
βWe got off the exponential growth train fairly early,β he said, adding that Arizonaβs head start was partly luck, with the outbreak starting later here, and partly due to beginning social distancing in time.
The result, he said, is that Arizonaβs surge will likely be more like walking up a hill than ascending a sharp mountain peak.
βI think weβre getting close to the worst of it,β he said, adding that itβs βstill important to practice social distancing.β
The IHME estimates Gerald used show that approximately 1,460 beds will be needed during the surge here while there are 6,017 hospital beds available in the state. In addition, there are 508 ICU beds of which 293 are estimated to be needed during Arizonaβs peak.
βThese projections align reasonably well with our hospitalsβ self-reporting of their own utilization and capacity,β Gerald said, referring to data on the stateβs health department site.
Based on the data heβs been studying, Gerald predicts hospitalizations will peak here April 26 or 27, although the stateβs health agency is predicting it may be closer to the very end of the month.
βThese models assume that we continue to maintain our social distancing efforts over the coming weeks,β he wrote.
Itβs a point Humble emphasized because, according to Geraldβs analysis, the lag between new infections and hospitalizations and ICU admissions means that the pace of these outcomes will increase for the next one to three weeks before slowing.
βOver the next two weeks, hospitals should prepare for a continued increase in admissions until a peak around April 27th,β Humble wrote, βThe strain is likely to be greater in critical care settings than general floor beds, but there appears to be adequate capacity to meet demand.β
Christ said the data on inpatient beds and ICU beds shows that over 25% of both ICU beds and inpatient beds statewide are currently available. With the governorβs order for surge capacity factored in, that increases to 40% availability for inpatient beds and up to 50% for ICU beds.
Currently, COVID-19 patients occupy only 15% to 18% of the ICU beds in use statewide and less than 10% of the inpatient beds, she said.
There has also been a βdownward trendβ in patients with coronavirus-like illness β fever, dry cough, shortness of breath β coming into both emergency rooms and inpatient settings, Christ said.
βThis is encouraging data, but it does not indicate that we have stopped the outbreak,β she said. βEveryone needs to remain vigilant about being physically distant.β
Photos for April 11: Tucson gets by during Coronavirus Pandemic