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>потому, что там рано ввели карантин. смеялся по всему миру, есличо, во время локдауна госпитали были полупустые и дичайше теряли деньги от Канады до Бангладеш >хотя у шведов были заполнены авотхуйже https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti At no stage did Sweden see a real shortage of medical equipment or hospital capacity, and tents set up as emergency care facilities around the country have mostly remained empty. https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/coronavir The Emergency Department is usually one of the busiest areas of any hospital, but now many ERs are full of empty beds, as patients with ailments and injuries unrelated to coronavirus are avoiding hospitals due to pandemic fears. “It’s so strange to walk through an emergency room with so many empty beds,” Dr. Gaurav Puri of Southlake Regional Health Centre in Newmarket told CTV News. “Here there are no wheelchairs and all of our rooms are empty.” There has been a 30- to 40-per-cent drop in patients in many ERs in Canada. https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/05/hospita U.S. hospitals are losing millions of dollars per day in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic — and recovery may take years Many hospitals won't publicly disclose their revenues. But the chairman of the Department of Medicine at UC San Francisco, Dr. Bob Wachter told CNBC that his hospitals lost more than $5 million per day in April alone, and that many of the wards are sitting mostly empty. "It's ironic in a middle of a pandemic that health care spending would be down," said Larry Levitt, the executive vice president for health policy at the nonprofit research group, the Kaiser Family Foundation. "But the losses in March and April have been astounding." Making matters more challenging, many hospitals say they are currently spending big sums to treat patients and keep their staff safe during the pandemic. There's some reimbursement revenue associated with Covid-19 patients, but it's typically not on par with what they typically make from elective procedures. And some hospitals, particularly those in rural areas, haven't yet had a flood of Covid-19 cases. In addition, many patients are delaying primary care, and emergency rooms are less packed than usual as even patients with life-threatening conditions worry about exposure and avoid coming in. https://www.sacbee.com/news/coronav Doctors have said that they’re seeing fewer people in emergency rooms for life-threatening conditions, including heart attacks, possibly due to the fear of getting infected with coronavirus, media outlets reported. Dr. Comilla Sasson, an emergency medicine physician in Denver, told NBC News that she told a patient who was experiencing heart attack symptoms to go to the hospital. The patient told her: “I would rather die than risk getting coronavirus right now.” Doctors are worrying that people with life-threatening conditions are delaying or forgoing treatment altogether, according to NBC. https://www.fox19.com/2020/05/07/hospit CINCINNATI (FOX19) - At the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, health officials thought we’d see a massive spike in cases that would threaten to overrun hospitals in the Tri-State and around Ohio. So far, that hasn’t happened. But the precautions were taken nonetheless, and regardless whether they were worthwhile, some hospitals wards now find their beds empty as a result. https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/04/2 Usually packed parking lots are empty. Hallways are silent. Vacant cafeterias are eerie. In the absence of an anticipated coronavirus surge, Bay Area emergency room doctors and nurses say the ongoing pandemic has transformed hospitals into deserts. Emergency visits have declined by more than half at Kaiser and Stanford. Santa Clara County’s three public hospitals have seen just 35 percent of their typical daily ER traffic. Visits also have dropped substantially at Sutter, John Muir and at other health care systems across the region. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/0 Thousands of beds for coronavirus patients in Bangladesh are lying empty despite the country struggling with a rising caseload as people are too scared to enter hospitals, officials and sufferers say. Some patients have bluntly told health workers they would "rather die at home than die in a hospital", an official for a medical charity told AFP news agency. Добавить комментарий: |
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