The Society of Critical Care Medicine just sent out an email discussing resource availability.
I'm more concerned after reading this letter. The data is extremely outdated in many parts. The numbers are obtained from the American Hospital Association which were obtained via voluntary survey. Here's an example: in 2009 we had, in the country, 62000 vents. We have almost 99000 old vents (I don't know what this means nor where they are bc they mention that 23k are NIV, 33k are automatic resuscitators, and 8500 are CPAP units). The strategic national stockpile has 8900 ventilators ready for deployment.
We're looking at an estimated total of 200,000 ventilators in the country.
They crunched the numbers based on the number of people who end up on the vent with COVID-19. We could reasonably expect 960,000 to require ventilatory support. I don't know if ventilatory support means non-invasive ventilation + high flow nasal cannula + mechanical ventilation or just MV. I've read about avoiding NIV and HFNC as they aerosolize the virus but I need to learn more.
It's great to see that we have more critical care beds per capita than anywhere else in the world, but who is going to take care of those patients when there's a limited supply of healthcare professionals who are trained to take care of the critically ill?
I see this as us being in deep trouble and that all the lockdowns, travel bans, cancellations of everything being justified. My respect for this is growing as I become more educated. I was supposed to go to Greece on Monday. I was bummed out but I reminded myself that this is not about me.
Stay safe, everyone.
-EJ
Link to PDF

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