23 February 2022

SOMETHING MORE TO WORRY ABOUT: Hospitals are Unsafe To Restrict Omnicon COVID TRANSMISSIONS

Intro: Major failure for doctors and so-called 'health-professionals'
A record 4,734 patients were recorded as having caught Covid-19 in-house on Jan. 19.
To make it worse The figures don’t say which hospitals accounted for the most transmission. The Department of Health and Human Services, which compiles the data, doesn’t release per-hospital numbers.
The figures are compiled as part of a daily survey of hospitals reporting how the pandemic affects their operations, from case loads to equipment supplies.

A record 4,734 patients were recorded as having caught Covid-19 in-house on Jan. 19.

COVID’s spread within hospitals hit all-time high amid omicron wave

Hospital risk was still relatively low, but surge speaks to omicron's transmissibility.

Spread of COVID-19 within US hospitals hit a record high in January, with more than 3,000 hospital-acquired infections each week during the month and a peak of over 4,300, according to an analysis of federal data by Politico.

The surge of hospital transmissions mirrored the towering wave of cases in the overall population driven by the ultratransmissible omicron variant. The previous record for hospital-transmission of COVID-19 occurred in January 2020 when federal data caught over 2,000 infections per week within hospitals.

Still the numbers overall are likely to be significant undercounts given that they only capture patients who spend 14 consecutive days in a hospital and become infected during their stay. The data does not account for shorter stays or people who test positive after discharge.

Politico noted that the data also does not indicate which hospitals had the highest transmission. And the data doesn't capture how the pandemic virus spread to patients within hospitals, i.e., how much was spread from health care workers to patients, patients to patients, or visitors to patients.

A variety of factors could have contributed to in-hospital spread, including limited availability of COVID testing and people spending long periods in crowded waiting rooms as some health care facilities became overwhelmed during the omicron surge. Lack of enforcement of masking in hospitals by patients and visitors may have also been a source of infection.

Another possibility is loosened guidance for infected health care workers

> Anonymous officials told Politico that the CDC is investigating the cause of the surge in hospital infections. But while there's room for improvement in transmission prevention measures, outside experts noted that the rate of infections within hospitals was very low relative to the rate of infections out in communities. Getting infections down to zero is almost impossible."

Ref: https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/02/covids-spread-within-hospitals-hit-all-time-high-amid-omicron-wave/

During the January Covid-19 surge a year ago, hospitals reported around 2,000 patients each week on average had contracted Covid during their stay, compared to roughly 3,000 this year.

> The total number of people who contract Covid-19 while in the hospital remains unclear because these figures only count patients who were in the hospital at least 14 consecutive days and don’t account for people who test positive after leaving.

>The government’s figures are likely a fraction of the total.

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