Coronavirus: Doctors fear Covid-19 yet to peak in the State as ICUs near full capacity

Medics are concerned at prospect of surge in critically ill patients in coming days

A nurse looking to COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit of Santa Maria Hospital, in Lisbon, Portugal. Photograph: Mario Cruz/EPA
A nurse looking to COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit of Santa Maria Hospital, in Lisbon, Portugal. Photograph: Mario Cruz/EPA

Emergency care doctors have expressed concern that the peak of the most critically ill coronavirus patients has yet to hit hospitals as existing intensive care units (ICUs) approach full capacity.

Medics have raised concerns about a surge of critically ill patients requiring intensive care this weekend and early next week, and a possible further peak later this month if members of the public did not adhere to social-distancing requirements over the Easter weekend.

Fears of rising public complacency about the virus were echoed by gardaí who are monitoring more than 1,000 locations in the State including forest walks and beaches in the run-up to the Easter holidays to ensure compliance.

Garda Deputy Commissioner John Twomey told The Irish Times that gardaí had noticed that people were “beginning to get tired” of the social-distancing regulations.

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The warnings came as the State’s health emergency team said that a further 25 people had died from the virus – the second-highest number of deaths in the daily announcement.

The deaths of 15 men and 10 women, whose median age was 80, brought the death toll to 235.

There were 365 new cases of the disease confirmed on Wednesday, bringing total cases past the 6,000 mark for the first time, to 6,074 known cases in the Republic.

Disclosing more details on the deaths, the State’s chief medical officer Dr Tony Holohan told the Department of Health’s daily briefing that the median age of all those who had died was 81.

Some 72 per cent, or 168 people, had died in hospital, while 12 per cent, or 27, had died in ICUs, he said.

Out of 227 people admitted to ICUs, 147 remain in ICU and 53 have been discharged. Some 80 per cent, or 181 people admitted to ICU, had a reported underlying health condition.

Surge capacity

Dr Liam Woods, the Health Service Executive’s national director of acute hospital operations, confirmed that regular ICU units at three of Dublin’s biggest hospitals, Beaumont, Connolly and the Mater, were full but that they had “surge” capacity to use other beds created for critical care.

There were 132 empty ICU beds overall in the hospital system, he said, and a capacity to transfer patients to other hospital ICUs around and outside Dublin.

There were an “underlying” 312 ICU beds but “surge plans nationally” to bring that up to 812, though this was contingent on the training of nurses and on the availability of ventilators and oxygen.

Dr Emily O’Conor, president of the Irish Association of Emergency Medicine, said hospital ICU units in Dublin were “becoming stretched” and that staffing ICU-type beds in overflow areas created by hospitals to prepare for the pandemic was “going to become a problem”.

“We haven’t reached our capacity yet in our potential but definitely things are getting fuller,” said the emergency medicine consultant at Connolly hospital.

Dr O’Conor said there was no feeling within hospitals that a peak had been reached.

“There is still a fair bit of anxiety about managing this surge over this weekend and into next week,” she said.

Dr Michael O’Dwyer, head of anaesthesia and critical care at St Vincent’s University Hospital in Dublin, cautioned against any public complacency or relaxation by the public in social distancing.

“If they were to be relaxed by the assumption that we have reached a peak, it is perfectly plausible that we will see a further peak a week or two weeks down the line,” he said.

“That could be very difficult to deal with in intensive care that is largely close to capacity.”

Concerns were expressed too about the rising numbers of infection clusters or outbreaks at nursing homes and other residential facilities, which stand at 137, including 74 in the east, Dr Holohan said. There were only four clusters – defined as two or more cases – on March 21st.

Dr O’Conor said doctors were concerned that nursing homes may become “reliant” on hospitals due to the large number of sick patients in their care or inadequate staffing levels.

Tadhg Daly, chief executive of Nursing Home Ireland, said the rapid increase in clusters showed “nursing homes are effectively dealing with the surge that the hospitals were expecting”.

Simon Carswell

Simon Carswell

Simon Carswell is News Editor of The Irish Times

Jack Power

Jack Power

Jack Power is acting Europe Correspondent of The Irish Times