Intensive care unit at St. Boniface Hospital over capacity due to COVID-19 surge - Action News
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Manitoba

Intensive care unit at St. Boniface Hospital over capacity due to COVID-19 surge

The intensive care unit at Winnipeg's St. Boniface Hospital is now over capacity due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, says a memo sent to hospital staff Thursday night.

News comes hours after health minister said province can 'flex up' ICU capacity

The intensive care unit at St. Boniface Hospital is now over capacity because of COVID-19 cases, says a staff memo. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

The intensive care unit at Winnipeg's St. Boniface Hospital is now over capacity due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, says a memo sent to hospital staff Thursday night.

The news comes just hours after Manitoba Health Minister Cameron FriesenacknowledgedthatWinnipeg has a dwindling number of vacant beds in its intensive care units.

A memo sent Thursday nightbythe hospital's president and CEO Martine Bouchardsays the hospital's intensive care medicine surgery unit, which treats the sickest patients, now has all 14 beds occupied.

More than half of patients needing critical care at the hospital have tested positive for COVID-19, Bouchard said.

"We know that patients being treated for COVID-19 remain in intensive care for longer periods of time that other critical care patients," she said.

"This puts additional pressure on our capacity."

As a result of the bed shortage, one patient had to be admitted to the hospital's cardiac surgery unit, but that unit cannot handle anymore patients due to low staffing caused by an ongoingCOVID-19 outbreak at the hospital,which has required several staff members to self-isolate, said Bouchard.

The Health Sciences Centre and GraceHospital are currently working on making additional capacity, she said. But at this point in time, St. Boniface Hospital will not be able to expand its capacity without cancelling further surgeries.

"While this matter is under consideration, we are mindful of the potential impacts on our surgical patients most in need," she said.

System can be flexible, minister says

Friesen said workers and resources can be redeployedto increase capacity, as Winnipeg's hospitals struggle with increasing COVID-19 case numbers.

"At times like this, health-care leaders and system leaders come together, and what they do is they determine how can we now redeploy workforce from across the system in order to focus on the most important thing," he told reporters.

"You might say we're approaching capacity in ICU, yes, but we have the ability to flex up and add capacity."

On Wednesday,Shared Healthchief nursing officerLanette Siragusasaidcritical care capacity was"dwindling," with only six of Winnipeg's 71 critical care bedsvacant an occupancy rate of92 per cent.

As of Thursday, there were 17 people in intensive care withCOVID-19.

'Now is the time' to boost capacity: NDP

If capacity in these units can be increased, NDP Leader Wab Kinew said the government shouldn't wait.

"Now is the time to add ICU beds if you have the capacity to increase the system," Kinew said.

He said the intensive care units which are for critically ill patients who need consistent monitoring are effectively at capacity already. There must always be vacanciesforevents likesignificantaccidents, he said.

"We've already hit that critical point when it comes to ICU beds."

Making matters worse, the Manitoba Nurses Union said Thursday that four ICU nurses at St. Boniface Hospital have tested positive for COVID-19 and anotheris in self-isolation.

Those five nurses are among a total of 23 at the hospital who have either tested positive or are self-isolating. The union says there are 12 more out of commission for the same reasons at Victoria General Hospital. Both of those Winnipeg hospitals are currently experiencing COVID-19 outbreaks.

Manitoba Health Minister Cameron Friesen and Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin have both said that a rising hospitalization rate is one of the concerning trends they're keeping an eye on. (David Lipnowski/The Canadian Press)

The health minister and Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin have cited limited capacity in hospitals as one of the main reasons to impose stricter rules on Manitobans tostop the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 from spreading.Friesen hintedthat Roussin would reveal stronger orders on Friday.

During question period Thursday, Kinew blamed the government for falling short on ICU management. He referenced statisticsthat showthe number ofICU beds in Winnipeg dropped from 73in January 2017 to 63byJuly 2019.

However,Siragusasaid on Wednesday that Winnipeg had 71 critical care beds.

"It turns out when you close emergency rooms and you cut health care, you end up with fewer ICU beds," Kinew said, referencing the Progressive Conservative government's years-longreformof the province's health-care system, which convertedthree Winnipeg emergency rooms into urgent care centres.

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authoritypreviously said the decline in ICU spaceswas intentional, because more beds were added specifically for cardiac patients requiring intensive care, along with more high-observation beds and a new category of intermediate beds, which previously didn't exist.

"Historical trends of the usage of these [ICU] beds showed a number of patients who did not require full ICU-level, one-to-one care, but who would require the services" of one of the other types of beds, WRHA chief health operations officerKrista Allansaid in a statement to CBC News in January.