domingo, 15 de noviembre de 2020

domingo, noviembre 15, 2020

The Second Wave Hits the Hospitals

German ICUs Are Struggling to Keep Up with Corona

German hospitals have invested heavily in the equipment needed to treat serious cases of COVID-19. But they lack the staff necessary to cope with the second coronavirus wave, which is already filling up intensive care units.

By Matthias Bartsch, Jürgen Dahlkamp, Katja Thimm, Nina Weber, Alfred Weinzierl und Steffen Winter

A COVID-19 patient and a nurse in the intensive care unit at a hospital in Gross-Gerau, Germany: In many cases, a full-time nurse is needed for each patient. Foto: Peter Jülich / DER SPIEGEL


The morning meeting at the Gross-Gerau District Hospital begins with bad news. "One the other, the clinics around us are closing their doors,” says hospital director Erika Raab. "The hospital in Odenwald” isn’t taking any new patients and "Bergstrasse" is also about to close, she says. 

And now it's the turn of Darmstadt, a medium-sized city located just south of Frankfurt. "The hospital in Darmstadt is asking if we still have any beds free,” Raab says, peering out at the silent group of about a dozen doctors and nurses gathered in the meeting room. She already knows the answer. "OK, we’re already having to prioritize ourselves.”

Raab, 46, is the managing director of a hospital outside Frankfurt that has 220 beds. It's 8:30 a.m. and she is leading the morning meeting, known to staffers as the "pandemic round," in a white smock. She's still wearing it as she hurries through the hospital corridors to collect information on the current coronavirus patients and to find ways to free up more beds for COVID-19 victims. 

That those patients will come is "as certain as Christmas,” says Raab. All you have to do is look at the rapidly increasing number of infections in Germany to see that.

In the rural district of Gross-Gerau, located just southwest of the coronavirus hotspots Frankfurt and Offenbach, the incidence rate is more than 200 coronavirus cases per 100,000 inhabitants a week. Studies, and past experience, show that around 10 percent of those cases require hospitalization. 

And of those patients, anywhere between one in five and one in 12 will end up in an intensive care unit at some point. "For us that means it's going to get really bad really soon,” says Raab.

The hospital has cancelled outpatient operations, and surgeons have been requested to focus on emergencies and otherwise help out as back-up staff for the internists. The internists, in turn, are increasingly needed to provide care in the coronavirus wards. 

Pregnancy classes that prepare women and their partners for birth have been cancelled, and midwives have been asked to assist the nurses in the wards.

But Raab doesn’t think that will be enough. The hospital head sits in her office and leafs through official notifications of excess work that have been filed by her overworked staff. 

There are complaints about too much overtime, about being required to work through breaks and about paperwork that takes deep into the night to complete. And about the increasingly time-consuming cleansing and disinfection of isolation rooms.



In Ward 2, a doctor reports how a 92-year-old coronavirus patient suffering from dementia tore off his ventilator mask several times during the night and tried to get out of his bed. Fortunately, the nurses were able to calm him down.

A few days earlier, two of the six nursing staff assigned to the ward were absent at short notice on night duty. One had to go into quarantine because of COVID and the other had called in sick. 

The four remaining nurses had to care for 39 patients, including 13 who were in isolation rooms and five who needed a "high level of care,” Raab says. It was too much for the nurses and one wrote a formal complaint to management. "We can’t rule out the possible endangerment of the patients,” the complaint reads.



For Raab, this has been a crisis that had been foreseeable for months. She thinks Germany grew too complacent after the first wave of the coronavirus. Plus, there were no pictures of dying COVID-19 patients in crowded hospital corridors in the spring the way there were in northern Italy, she says, and people assumed that would also be the case in the fall.

Politicians also kept insisting that the German health-care system is one of the best in the world and that it had stood up to the test. Meanwhile, many additional ventilators, they noted, had been purchased and the capacity of intensive care units was greatly expanded. What could go wrong?

In the meantime, however, politicians are expressing growing alarm. "The situation is threatening to slide out of control,” Tobias Hans, the governor of the state of Saarland, said last Tuesday. 

"We are threatened with the kind of conditions seen in Bergamo in the spring, with overcrowded hospitals and gymnasiums converted into emergency hospitals” and medical staff "far beyond their limits.”

It’s a gloomy forecast that isn’t just limited to small hospitals in rural areas - it also applies to well-equipped, high performance clinics in the big cities. Ulrich Frei, an internist and a board member for patient care at Berlin’s Charité University Hospital, offers a simple calculation: "If around 1,500 people in the capital city were to get infected each day, and 2 percent of them, as we are seeing here, end up in an intensive care unit with a time delay of around two weeks, that would mean around 30 new intensive care patients every day in Berlin alone.” Some would probably have to be placed on ventilators for several weeks.

Frei says there are already well over 200 COVID-19 patients in intensive care units in Berlin – more than at the peak of the first wave in April. He says the city still has reserve capacity, including a temporary container hospital with 73 beds that can be used as intensive care units. 

Almost 20 of those beds, though, are already occupied. And with the large number of new patients, it is only a matter of days before contingency emergency wards like that are full.

No one knows yet how big the second wave will be. Much hinges on how well the new partial lockdown and contact restrictions in place since the beginning of November work. 

But given the fluctuation of new daily infection figures of between 10,000 and 20,000 people, the second wave will result in "more than double as many patients” in the intensive care units in November than during the first wave in the spring, predicts Gerald Gass, the president of the German Hospital Federation (DKG).

How are hospitals going to cope with that? In the Rhine-Main area, the intensive care units at the large "Level 1” hospitals in Frankfurt and the suburb Offenbach were already at well-over 80 percent of capacity at the beginning of last week, and by that Tuesday, they had reached 90 percent capacity, according to an internal status report. 

Frankfurt’s University Hospital, which doesn’t release any figures on the number of people being treated in its intensive care unit, has been trying for the past several days to send corona patients to other smaller hospitals in the vicinity, as far away as Bad Nauheim, a town located 30 kilometers away.

Managing Director Raab (second from left) and hospital staff: "It's going to get really bad soon." Foto: Peter Jülich / DER SPIEGEL


A system for the distribution of patients has begun emerging in Germany. Rolf Lamberts, senior physician in the intensive care unit at the Gross Gerau District Hospital, was sitting in a colleague's office a week ago Friday when someone from a large Frankfurt hospital called. 

The official said a 56-year-old COVID-19 patient had been in a normal hospital bed for the past four days, but urgently needed an intensive care bed and there were none left in Frankfurt. Lamberts didn't have to think for long. Though his ICU ward is small, and five of its six beds were already occupied, he agreed to take the patient anyway.

Lamberts, too, had to move patients to other hospitals when their condition worsened. 

The Gross-Gerau hospital doesn’t have an ECMO, a state-of-the-art machine that can take over the complete function of the lung if necessary. Lamberts managed to find a free ECMO slot for his patient not too far away in Wiesbaden. In return, the Gross-Gerau clinic took in a malaria patient from the Wiesbaden hospital.

Ten minutes after the call from Frankfurt, Lambert’s smartphone rang again. This time, it was a small clinic in the southern part of the state calling not about a corona case but an acute poisoning. 

"I’m sorry,” Lambert said, "but I just gave away my last bed.” His colleague Zeynep Babacan, head of the COVID unit, immediately called the gate of the district hospital. "No new admissions to the ICU - at least until 9 a.m. tomorrow.”

A few days prior, the hospital had been forced to close its emergency room once before due to overcrowding, a function of the many COVID-19 cases. During that time, ambulances were asked to deliver patients to other hospitals, an unpleasant situation for the medical staff. "I actually became a doctor to help people in need,” says Babacan.

If it were just a matter of technical equipment, the district hospital would still have reserves. Lamberts says he has two additional intensive care beds that he could put to use immediately, and there are at least two more that could be made available later. 

The rooms and the necessary equipment are there, he says. In the summer, the hospital spent 400,000 euros to acquire new ventilators. The problem is that you need people who can operate the devices, says Managing Director Raab.

The hospital, which is owned by the local government, recently went through bankruptcy proceedings and had to reduce its staff size as a result. Since then, the hospital has been forced to cut corners everywhere, even under normal operating conditions. 

Raab says that the additional burdens created by COVID-19 can only be overcome if other services at the hospital are significantly reduced. Or suspended entirely if things get really bad.

Frankfurt's University Hospital has been trying for days now to send corona patients to other smaller hospitals in the vicinity.

The situation is similar in small and large hospitals all across Germany: It’s not the equipment that is creating the decisive bottleneck in corona patient care - it’s the lack of qualified staff.

Two years ago, the services union Ver.di criticized the shortage of up to 80,000 nurses in Germany’s hospitals. That shortage is now making itself painfully apparent right where they are most needed in the pandemic: in the intensive care units.

The consequences of the shortfall were recognized earlier this month by the very experts in Germany who are tasked with providing the overview of the number of intensive care beds that are available in the country. 

"We have been receiving a lot of feedback that the beds we had reported as being free in fact weren’t available at all,” says Christian Karagiannidis of the German Interdisciplinary Association for Intensive and Emergency Medicine (DIVI).

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