'Completely overwhelming': Steinbach ER at capacity treating COVID-19 patients, nurse says - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 04:06 AM | Calgary | -17.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

'Completely overwhelming': Steinbach ER at capacity treating COVID-19 patients, nurse says

Bethesda Regional Health Centre is struggling to handle the surge of COVID-19 patients, say nurses who work there.

Patient at Bethesda Regional Health Centre ER being triaged in their cars, union says

Sarah Neufeld, an ER nurse at Bethesda Regional Health Centre in Steinbach, Man., says staff and space are overwhelmed due to a surge of COVID-19 patients. (Submitted by Sarah Neufeld)

A Manitoba emergency roomnurse says her hospital is drowning and desperate for help, in the face of a flood of COVID-19 patients that is pushing staff and capacity to the brink.

"It has been completely and absolutely overwhelming," said Sarah Neufeld, who works at Bethesda Regional Health Centre in Steinbach, Man.

"We don't just have a full waiting room. We have a full waiting room and a full ER, of very sick and sometimes rapidly declining patients that require a lot of one-to-one care nursingthat we can't give we cannot safely give."

COVID-19 patients rushed to the hospital by ambulance are sometimes forced to wait for hours in the ambulance bay with EMS care before a bed is available for them, she said.

More stable patients are asked to come in, get triaged and return to their vehicles to wait, sometimes for hours, Neufeld added.

"That looks like every single bed being full. That looks like both of our negative pressure rooms being full. Sometimes, even, our trauma rooms [are] full. We have patients in the hallway," she said.

Steinbach has become a COVID-19 hot spot within a hot spot. The health region of roughly 21,000 people has some of the highest per-capita case rates in Manitoba, which has the highest per-capita rates in Canada.

Bethesda Regional Health Centre is a COVID-19 care centre for virtually all of the province's southeast, Neufeld said.She has spent most of her 13 years of nursing experience at Bethesda, including the past 2 years in the ER.

But she has never seen anything like this.

"It has pushed us past what we thought we were able to handle. And we're starting to question, how is this sustainable? We're short-staffed every day."

Multiple outbreaks

Nurses at Bethesdaare having to triage some patients in theircars because they don't havespace in the emergency department, their union says.

There's a "dramatically increasing number of COVID-positive patients" arrivingat the hospital, according to Manitoba Nurses Union president Darlene Jackson.

The hospital is also only staffed at or below baseline levels, despite the surge in patients, and additional nurses and support staff are needed immediately, the union says.

Also, Jackson says nurses have said restocking of supplies and PPE is not happening in a timely manner, and reportedbasic equipment shortages of items like commodes and infusion pumps.

The exterior of a hospital in Steinbach. A vehicle is parked in front of the hospital entrance.
The hospital in Steinbach is dealing with a surge in COVID-19 cases, the nurses union says, and some patients are being triaged in the parking lot. (Justin Fraser/CBC)

Paramedics serving the area have also reported increasingdifficulty to get patients into Bethesda's ER, said Bob Moroz,president of the Manitoba Association of Health Care Professionals.The long delays are piling stressonto a workforce that is already stretched thin, he said.

"Each time that that happens, that ambulance and that crew is now essentially out of commission [while] they're waiting," Moroz said.

As the volume of COVID-19 patients rises, Moroz said it's also becoming increasingly difficult for paramedics to find facilities for non-COVID-19 patients.

Paramedics are spending their entire shifts sometimes well over 12 hours, thanks to the high demand in full personal protective equipment, he said, because community transmission in the area has become so widespread they must assume any patient could have COVID-19.

"Our members are all tired, they're fatigued, they're stressed beyond belief and they need help. They need that support," he said.

"In the vast majority of cases, they're just feeling that it's not being provided."

'It's not unusual': Siragusa

Lanette Siragusa, chief nursing officer for Shared Health, said the hospital staff "certainly are busy."

But "it'snot unusual for health-care workers to go out to the ambulance bay and do their triage and assess before bringing them in," she said during a COVID-19 news conferenceFriday.

It's not just that illness,but other medical issues as well that are making the ER busy, she said.

"Yes, they are busy, but that's the flow. The flow should be happening. And I think they're doing the best they can in a busy situation."

Siragusa said some patients will be transferred out of Bethesda, which is part of the planning for a surge.

"If there are patients who are lower acuity, it wouldn'tbe unexpected that they'retransferred to a different hospital. That's part of their strategy," she said.

"Like I said for the past week, the intensity of this is going to increase, and we're all starting to feel it."

Manitoba Health Minister Cameron Friesencalled the situation at Bethesda "concerning," and said he was made awareearlier Friday afternoon that some patients were waiting hours to get ER beds.

"System leaders are aware; this is why we make plans. And so plans are being formed now to be able to properly address the impact of patients arriving at hospital," he said."And plans are being made, of course, to be able to utilize that hospital's capacity and other capacity to the fullest extent possible to make everyone safe."

WATCH| A front-line worker describes the conditions she witnessed at her hospital:

'I've never seen anything like this': Sarah Neufeld describes the scene in her ER during COVID-19

4 years ago
Duration 2:54
A Manitoba ER nurse says her hospital is drowning and desperate for help, in the face of a flood of COVID-19 patients that is pushing staff and capacity to the brink.

'They have no idea how dire it is'

Neufeld said she doesn't want to lay blame on any one person. But her team needs help, and she wants government and the public to know they're desperate.

"I go out into my community and they have no idea how dire it is, how hard it is," she said.

Decision-makers confronting COVID-19 should go to Bethesda to get a clearer picture of what health-care workers are facing, she said.

She urged the public to follow health advice to keep each other safe.

"What people can do is they can support their front-line workers," she said. "They canlove instead of hate. There's a lot of anger going out on social media right now, as you've probably seen yourself. And they can wear their masks and follow provincial guidelines."

WATCH| Staff at Bethesda hospital struggle with climbing COVID-19 cases:

'Emotionally, that plays a huge toll': ER nurse struggling with high volume of patients

4 years ago
Duration 2:28
Nurses at the hospital in Steinbach, Man., are having to triage some patients in their cars because they don't have space in the emergency department, their union says. There's a "dramatically increasing number of COVID-positive patients" arriving at Bethesda Regional Health Centre, according to Manitoba Nurses Union president Darlene Jackson. The hospital is struggling with capacity, the union says, with patients arriving on their own and by ambulance.