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Topic: Doctors fear health care collapse amid omicron surge - page 3. (Read 336 times)

hero member
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Well, even the countries that has the best medical system can't avoid the surge of covid-19. These new covid straints are really infectious and despite having the vaccine and the booster shots, no one is going to escape the contraction of it.
That's what we can do right, protect ourselves and have a stronger immune system. Eating healthy foods and having at least some days for exercise to strengthen our bodies.
hero member
Activity: 2520
Merit: 624
 People taking steps to exercise more and be healthier would go a long way towards making healthcare more affordable for all. As would people refraining from drug and substance abuse. These are not necessarily issues for government to solve. But has more to do with choices made on an individual level.
I certainly agree, in a period like this where the strength of your immune system matters alot, it would be wise for one to strive towards achieving better health. As a booster to your immune system, you should try to exercise more, eat more vegetables, drink more water, enjoy the fresh air, get some sunlight, eat fruits, reduce on the junk, take more vitamins, and have more rest.

These factors don't have anything to do with covid-19 or omicron variant of it if you expose yourself to it. Immune system is not just what it takes not to be affected, even with immune system some people are not strong enough to with stand certain challenges from birth. It is better to abstain from making contacts when not necessary or with an effected person or partner. The reason that immune system is not a strong point for me than abstaining is that even health workers despite their immune system and vaccination still wearing all the protective equipment to keep themselves safe.
hero member
Activity: 1694
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Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
The covid crisis made many markets collapse and made many people lose their jobs recently we hear much news from some countries where they are opening the businesses and finishing the lockdown, but this new virus omicron can make everything worse once again because we did face the economic crisis because of the covid and food price were increasing also the inflation rate in the world, this situation was even harder for poor people because they couldn't get a good healthcare service usually because of the financial problems in their country and now that's completely normal to see the doctors fear about omicron because the world is still facing with covid and not ready for this new crisis which can make everything worse.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 2017
Maybe the numbers will eventually prove me right, but I'm not worried about the new Omicron variant. The natural tendency in previous epidemics was to evolve to less deadly variants, and in some cases to disappear. In those times, no vaccines, no masks, nothing. I'm talking from the flu epidemics of ancient Greece, through the Black Death to the present day.

The fear of collapse is not from now, it is from the beginning of the epidemic. In fact, some hospitals collapsed, as in Italy. I don't know what will happen in the US but at least where I live Omicron does not seem to be a big threat.

  People taking steps to exercise more and be healthier would go a long way towards making healthcare more affordable for all. As would people refraining from drug and substance abuse. These are not necessarily issues for government to solve. But has more to do with choices made on an individual level.
I certainly agree, in a period like this where the strength of your immune system matters alot, it would be wise for one to strive towards achieving better health. As a booster to your immune system, you should try to exercise more, eat more vegetables, drink more water, enjoy the fresh air, get some sunlight, eat fruits, reduce on the junk, take more vitamins, and have more rest.

Yes, but that was a problem that existed before COVID. It is not specific to this.
legendary
Activity: 1414
Merit: 1104
Bitcoin Casino Est. 2013
 People taking steps to exercise more and be healthier would go a long way towards making healthcare more affordable for all. As would people refraining from drug and substance abuse. These are not necessarily issues for government to solve. But has more to do with choices made on an individual level.
I certainly agree, in a period like this where the strength of your immune system matters alot, it would be wise for one to strive towards achieving better health. As a booster to your immune system, you should try to exercise more, eat more vegetables, drink more water, enjoy the fresh air, get some sunlight, eat fruits, reduce on the junk, take more vitamins, and have more rest.
legendary
Activity: 3206
Merit: 1213
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A greater quantity of COVID driven healthcare demand coupled with higher strain on existing healthcare. Could result in scarcity which will inevitably drive healthcare prices even higher. If the united states thought healthcare was expensive pre COVID crisis. I can't imagine how much worse conditions could potentially deteriorate post COVID crisis.
Government should consider this, beyond that it isn't possible to keep things under control. More than 85% of the people hold a medical insurance, so unlike the price they receive the treatment. Now the government need to focus on the remaining 15% who seems to homeless and unaffordable. If the government plan well, it can be solved.
While certainly the worst case scenario is bad enough. It could also trigger a resurgence of home remedies and snake oil medical treatments. Due to people not being able to afford medical care. Faith healers, alternative health movements and holistic remedies could all make a strong resurgence.
Even now people are much into home remedies than reaching a hospital for the treatment. This is not because people aren't able to afford, this is just returning back to the old days of traditional healing. I'm not sure of what is the scenario in US. In my country people are getting used to it and not to faith healers.

Cryptocurrencies, I think could be developed to improve healthcare in the united states and worldwide. There are many obvious steps to improve healthcare. People taking steps to exercise more and be healthier would go a long way towards making healthcare more affordable for all. As would people refraining from drug and substance abuse. These are not necessarily issues for government to solve. But has more to do with choices made on an individual level.
Right now cryptocurrencies can't do anything to improve the healthcare network. Because, everything needs to be done in a much secure way than anything traditional. Maybe if governments weren't interested in doing it, corporate networks could collaborate and find a solution.

High numbers of americans drive across the border to mexico every year to receive healthcare treatments at greatly discounted prices. That is probably the best option many have to receive affordable heatlhcare. But surely we can do better than that?
This is happening with almost every country. For now it is Americans driving to Mexico. Over the Asian continent, it is India where people travel for healthcare.
legendary
Activity: 2562
Merit: 1441
Quote
Many hospitals across the country are in crisis as cases surge and staffing is at critical lows.

Hospitals nationwide are once again buckling under the strain of COVID-19 cases as the ultratransmissible omicron wave crashes into health care systems that are already critically short-staffed and exhausted from previous waves of the pandemic.

The current situation is forcing states and hospitals to declare emergencies, deploy the National Guard, delay or cancel elective procedures, institute crisis standards of care, and allow health providers to stay at work even if they themselves are positive for COVID-19 because there is no one available to take their place. Together, the situation has some doctors openly worrying that the omicron wave will cause some systems to collapse in the coming weeks.

"The comforting news that this variant generally causes milder disease overlooks the unfolding tragedy happening on the front lines," Craig Spencer, an emergency medicine physician and director of global health in emergency medicine at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center, wrote in a New York Times opinion piece Monday.

Spencer noted that, unlike this time last year, there are effective COVID-19 treatment plans, therapeutics, and vaccines. "Yet these tools are still not enough to slow the rapid influx of patients we’re now seeing from omicron, and the situation is bleak for health workers and hospitals."

Numbers and projections

Currently, the seven-day average of daily COVID-19 cases is nearing 700,000—an all-time high in the pandemic. Meanwhile, daily hospitalizations are averaging over 132,000, up 83 percent in the course of two weeks. The number of hospitalizations is quickly nearing the all-time record of around 137,000 hospitalizations per day in the pandemic, which was set in mid-January last year.

According to data reported by the Department of Health and Human Services, 77 percent of hospital beds in the country are occupied and 78 percent of beds in intensive care units are full. But the department's data can have lags, reflecting hospital usages that may be one to two weeks behind. For instance, physicians and researchers tracking hospital capacity suggest Maryland's hospitals may now be hitting capacity, based on a projection of lagging HHS hospital data that suggests hospital beds are only 79 percent full.

In his online bulletin, Inside Medicine, Harvard emergency physician Jeremy Faust on Monday quoted a Maryland physician colleague as backing up the projection, saying:

Quote
I can attest the situation in Maryland is [expletive] horrendous. The state has been maxed out for about 2 weeks. Multiple hospitals are operating under crisis standard of care. EMS [i.e. ambulances] is now so taxed that Baltimore county started transporting people in fire trucks last week. This is absolutely unheard of and absurd. Reports of people waiting over 1-2 hours on scene with fire fighters before an EMS unit gets there. Then when they get to the hospital they wait literally hours for a bed. Transfer centers now just laugh when you call the system is so back logged. It’s mind boggling to me how none of this has been national news.

Strained systems

Though a smaller proportion of people infected with omicron appears to develop severe COVID-19, there's still a crush of patients, and some of them are suffering the worst of the disease. Last Friday, for instance, a hospital in Kansas ran out of ventilators amid a surge in COVID-19 cases, spurring the county board to issue a local emergency bulletin. In addition, omicron is reaching vulnerable populations that end up needing hospital care after omicron exacerbates a previous condition, such as diabetes. Meanwhile, seasonal flu and other conditions bringing people to hospitals are also at high levels.

The surge of patients is coming at a time when overstretched hospitals are already critically understaffed and providers are facing extreme burnout.

On Monday, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam issued a limited 30-day state of emergency to try to ease the strain on overburdened hospitals after the state saw record numbers of hospitalizations last week. The order allows hospitals to increase their bed capacity and increase staffing through a number of technical changes, such as adding flexibility for active out-of-state providers to practice in the state and expanding the ability of physician assistants to provide care.

"Health care workers and hospitals are exhausted, and they are again facing increasing numbers of patients, affecting their ability to provide care," Gov. Northam said in a statement. "These steps will help ease the strain, giving medical professionals more flexibility to care for people. Ultimately, the best thing everyone can do for our hospitals and their staff is to get vaccinated."

Easing the strain

Neighboring Maryland issued a similar 30-day state of emergency last week to buttress the state's health care facilities amid record-high COVID-19 hospitalizations.

"The truth is that the next four to six weeks will be the most challenging of the entire pandemic," Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said in a statement last week. "All of the emergency actions we are taking today are to keep our hospitals from overflowing, to keep our kids in school, and to keep Maryland open for business, and we will continue to take whatever actions are necessary in the very difficult days and weeks ahead."

Gov. Hogan's order mobilized 1,000 members of the Maryland National Guard to assist state and local health officials. At least 10 states have called up National Guard members, spanning Oregon to New York, to help respond to the tidal wave of omicron cases and hospitalizations. For instance, Massachusetts deployed National Guard members in late December to hospitals deluged by COVID-19 patients. One of those facilities is UMass Memorial Medical Center, the main hospital in central Massachusetts, which is currently operating at 115 percent, according to a January 9 report by CNN.

"It's just the perfect storm for a nightmare here in the emergency department," Dr. Eric Dickson, CEO of the hospital and an emergency physician, told the outlet.

The staffing crisis also has led some hospitals, such as some in Rhode Island and Arizona, to allow medical providers to stay at work, even if they themselves are infected with COVID-19.



https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/01/hospitals-nationwide-are-buckling-under-omicron-as-cases-continue-to-spike/


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A greater quantity of COVID driven healthcare demand coupled with higher strain on existing healthcare. Could result in scarcity which will inevitably drive healthcare prices even higher. If the united states thought healthcare was expensive pre COVID crisis. I can't imagine how much worse conditions could potentially deteriorate post COVID crisis.

While certainly the worst case scenario is bad enough. It could also trigger a resurgence of home remedies and snake oil medical treatments. Due to people not being able to afford medical care. Faith healers, alternative health movements and holistic remedies could all make a strong resurgence.

Cryptocurrencies, I think could be developed to improve healthcare in the united states and worldwide. There are many obvious steps to improve healthcare. People taking steps to exercise more and be healthier would go a long way towards making healthcare more affordable for all. As would people refraining from drug and substance abuse. These are not necessarily issues for government to solve. But has more to do with choices made on an individual level.

High numbers of americans drive across the border to mexico every year to receive healthcare treatments at greatly discounted prices. That is probably the best option many have to receive affordable heatlhcare. But surely we can do better than that?
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