As patients line up with a variety of complaints, including Covid-19 symptoms, hospital officials are urging Islanders to only seek treatment in the ER if there is a real emergency.
Ray Ewing

Its Emergency Room Jammed, Hospital Feels Impact of Case Spike

The Martha’s Vineyard Hospital is seeing its largest numbers of Covid and non-Covid related patients since the pandemic began, testing emergency room capacity as cases spike on-Island during the peak of summer.

The Martha’s Vineyard Hospital is seeing its largest numbers of Covid and non-Covid related patients since the pandemic began, testing emergency room capacity as cases spike on-Island during the peak of summer.

In a press briefing Wednesday morning, hospital officials also said they would be reaching out to a small number of Islanders who have become eligible for a Covid-19 booster shot, with the federal government soon set to authorize third vaccination shots for the broader public.

Meanwhile, the hospital currently has three patients hospitalized with Covid-19 and a fourth patient under investigation showing Covid-like symptoms. A fifth Covid-positive patient was critically airlifted to Boston last week, hospital officials said during the media briefing Wednesday morning.

According to head of hospital operations and chief nurse Clair Seguin, one of the hospitalized patients is in serious condition, two are in fair condition and one is in good condition. The airlifted patient was in critical condition, Ms. Seguin said.

“This is the highest amount of Covid-positive patient activity that we’ve had since the onset of the pandemic,” Ms. Seguin said at the briefing.

The sharp rise in Covid-19 hospitalizations comes as the Island has seen a dramatic increase in case numbers throughout August. Health officials reported 87 new positive PCR tests last week, as well as a handful of positive over-the-counter Covid tests.

While hospital officials could not disclose the individual vaccination status of specific patients, they said the sickest patients were unvaccinated.

“It’s a mix,” Ms. Seguin said. “I would say the sickest patients have been unvaccinated.”

Hospital president and CEO Denise Schepici said the uptick in Covid hospitalizations and cases has also been paired with a rise in non-Covid related hospital business, particularly in the emergency room. Wait times for non-emergency treatment can stretch as long as two to three hours, she said.

“The increase in cases is also coming at a very busy time for the hospital,” Ms. Schepici said. “We’re bursting at the seams.”

Ms. Schepici said Islanders who deferred care during the pandemic, general summer colds as well as people with mild Covid-19 symptoms coming to the emergency room seeking care, were all factors the hospital’s particularly busy month. She pressed people to exercise judgment about when they decide to come to the emergency room.

“We are pretty jam packed,” Ms. Schepici said. “This is why we have been encouraging folks not to come to the emergency room unless . . . you are feeling really, really sick and you feel like it’s an emergency.”

At the briefing hospital officials also said calls would go out to specific Islanders who are eligible for a third Covid-19 vaccination shot with the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.

A second Johnson & Johnson shot has not yet been authorized, according to hospital officials.

Current eligibility is based upon the length of time between the second and third dose — which should be around eight months — as well as medical criteria, hospital officials said.

“The key variable here is eight months after the second dose,” Ms. Schepici said.

Federal approval of the third shot is expected soon, according to hospital officials. A couple hundred Island patients are already eligible, they said.

Hospital officials expected the broader third-shot vaccine rollout to closely follow rollout for the first and second shots, except with fewer supply issues.

Meanwhile, they said the increase in cases had prompted an increase in the number of patients arriving at the hospital for a first-dose Covid-19 vaccine. Approximately 80 patients per day are coming to receive their first shots, after vaccination rates dropped to near-zero earlier in the summer.

Officials attributed the increase to concern about rising cases among initially vaccine-hesitant people, as well as an influx of visitors, and emerging vaccine requirements by colleges and workplaces.

But even beyond Covid, hospital busyness remains a concern as the countdown begins to the end of summer.

“It’s deferred care . . . an exacerbation of many things,” Ms. Schepici said. “We’re hoping there will be a reprieve in September. But that’s a prayer right now.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/18/2021 - 13:01

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Meg MV

Why the decision on a Tuesday to begin masking on Friday? A recent drive through a down island town revealed scant masking in stores. Is Covid not scheduled to become virulent until Friday?

Matt Poole Edgartown Bd of Health

The indoor mask mandate goes into effect in VH, OB & Edg on THURSDAY (not Fri) at 12:01 AM. As another commenter noted, this is to allow businesses time to post necessary signage and make any needed operational adjustments. Clearly -- everyone, public, business owners & employees, are encouraged to mask indoors as early and soon as they're able.

Gene Edgartown

Matt,
Can you provide any scientific evidence that mask wearing will protect me and my family from Covid? From my understanding you need to wear full head gear etc…A very serious question thank you for your time.

LAO Boston and Edgartown

@Gene
Start with this summary from the CDC. Nice table listing fifteen studies with a good range of populations and locations. It cites 65 articles
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/science-briefs/maskin…

Or this from the Lancet--a meta-analysis of 172 studies from 16 countries evaluating the effectiveness of distancing, mask use and eye protection in reducing spread of SARS-CoV-2 that causes COVID-19 as well as earlier studies of MERS and SARS.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)3114…

Here is one important point from the CDC that is worth emphasizing. "Research supports that mask wearing has no significant adverse health effects for wearers." Sure, wearing a mask may be a little uncomfortable or inconvenient, but that is vastly outweighed by ample evidence that masks protect our families, friends, co-workers and neighbors from this terrible disease.

David Edgartown

Gene, a serious question. Do you believe in bike helmets and seatbelts? Or are you in denial of all common sense? Personally, I think you and your family probably should wear full head gear.

Carla Cooper

If wearing a mask has only a .000001% chance of saving someone's life, I'm doing it. For the love of God people, stop being so stupid, selfish and entitled. Put on the damn mask and let's get this pandemic behind us.

John P West Tisbury

There is no perfect protection from COVID provided by masks or vaccines; there is, however, an abundance of evidence for the relative benefits of both. Simply google “benefits of face masks covid” and you will find numerous discussions, reviews, and observational studies demonstrating the benefits of mask wearing, particularly in crowded indoor settings.

John Cape Cod

The purpose of wearing a mask is not to protect the person who wears it but to contain the persons breath with its potential COVID droplets to the area around the mask itself. This in turn contains the spread of COVID to other people. The mask doesn't filter the air you breathe as it does not provide a airtight seal against your face, unless it is a certified face sealed cartridge respirator.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/18/2021 - 13:50

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Ken EDG.,

How hard is it to get vaccinated? Do they have to hand out lollipops?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/18/2021 - 17:29

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Donald Edg

Anyone that has a IQ Should not be shocked this has happened. If I'm one of smartest people in this issue we are in trouble. I'm a chicken farmer and if you raise to many together at one time and one gets sick. you separate it from the others by putting it in a different pen. If another one gets a broken wing you put it in a different pen. Fortunately I have a lot of holding pens because I knew this would happen. Or don't put more chickens to start with in the pen.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/19/2021 - 00:28

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Jesse Chase Martha’s Vineyard

If our own Martha’s Vineyard Hospital doesn’t have enough ER capacity for the actual year round residents of our island, then perhaps it’s now time for our visitors to return to their own homes and hospitals? Imagine not being able to use our own ER. The USA (and Island) is in the most contagious and lethal phase of the global Covid19 pandemic to date. It’s well beyond time that we ALL behave accordingly! The season is OVER! Now the actual island community will pay for allowing it. Let us please reclaim our own hospital, stat — we now need it for ourselves. Choices have consequences, folks. Safe travels home.

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