H1N1 flu could fill hospital beds
Posted on: Thursday, 1 October 2009, 14:17 CDT
Fifteen U.S. states could run out of hospital beds at the peak of the H1N1 virus outbreak if 35 percent of the population gets the flu, a non-profit says.
A report by Trust for America's Health, a non-profit organization working to make disease prevention a national priority, also said 12 additional states could reach or exceed 75 percent of their hospital bed capacity. The group based its projections on estimates from the FluSurge model developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The number of people hospitalized could range from a high of 168,025 in California to a low of 2,485 in Wyoming, and many states may face shortages of beds or may need to reduce the number of non-flu related discretionary hospitalizations due to limited hospital bed availability, the report said.
The number of people who get sick from the swine flu could range from a high of 12.9 million in California to a low of 186,434 in Wyoming if 35 percent of Americans get H1N1 flu, the report said.
The country's much more prepared than we were a few short years ago for a pandemic, but there are some long-term underlying problems which complicate response efforts, like surge capacity and the need to modernize core public health areas like communications and surveillance capabilities,
Jeff Levi, executive director of TFAH, said.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- Less Than 2 Percent Of Hospitals Use Electronic Health Records
- Flu shot reduces hospitalizations
- Patient Portal Technologies Awarded Contract Extension With Novation; Contract Provides Access to 49 Percent of Hospital Admissions in the U.S.
- Staff Care Survey: 77 Percent of Hospitals Report Using Physician 'Temps'
- Childrens Hospital Los Angeles Is Granted the Highly Coveted 'Magnet Recognition' for Nursing Excellence; Only Five Percent of Hospitals in U.S. Have Received Magnet Status
- Novation Survey on Pandemic Flu Preparedness Shows Hospitals Will Run Out of Supplies in Less Than One Week
- VHA Inc. Survey on Avian Flu Shows Some Hospitals Would Exhaust Supplies in Two Weeks
- Flu Outbreak Jams E.V. Hospitals: Growth May Ease ER Pressure
- 'Tis the (Flu) Season: Number of Flu Cases in N.M. Doubles in Past Week
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds