Why a Bird Flu Pandemic Will Overwhelm Our Healthcare System
If you think our healthcare system has problems now, how do you
think it will fare in the event of a bird flu pandemic? Avian
influenza is currently not spread by person-to-person contact.
Since 2003, 165 people worldwide have contacted bird flu and
about 88 of those people have died. Those individuals all had
close contact with infected birds. Scientists fear that it is
only a matter of time before the virus mutates into a form that
can be spread by human contact. When that happens it could
spread around the world within weeks or months. Governments
around the world are scrambling to find solutions to prevent
that from happening. Antivirals such as Tamiflu are being
stockpiled. Current inventory may only cover about 20% of the
population or less. If a pandemic breaks out, those stockpiles
would quickly dwindle. New antivirals would take 6 months to get
into high volume production and distributed to those who need it.
In the event of an influenza pandemic, our healthcare system
will be stretched to the limit. If we examine the numbers we can
see the frightening scenario. Based on a "mild" pandemic this is
what we are looking at:
Population of the United States: 295,000,000
10-20% of the population becomes ill: 29,500,000-59,000,000
Percentage of people requiring hospitalization 10% 2,950,000
Number of hospital beds nationwide: 955,768
Number of ventilators nationwide: 100,000
Some of those numbers may be conservative. The percentage of
the population that becomes ill could be 30-50%. The number of
available hospital beds would go unchanged. Now lets factor in
the following facts. Hospitals would not be sitting empty just
waiting for flu patients, many are already fill to capacity with
everyday illnesses, cancer patients, new babies, and heart
attack patients. Those would not go away, they would continue.
Doctors offices, hospital emergency rooms and urgent care
centers would be filled to capacity with people who are worried
they have the flu overwhelming the staff and the need for lab
results.
Those needing hospitalization would flood local hospitals that
would have nowhere to put them. Most hospitals have very limited
space for isolating patients that may be required in the case of
influenza. Ventilators are in short supply to begin with and
only those most likely to live would be given access. At some
point hospitals would need to turn away all but the sickest
patients. As in the 1918 influenza, public buildings would have
to be open up for additional hospital wards to take care of the
ill.
Are there even going to be enough healthcare workers to care for
the sick? Many healthcare workers and first responders may stay
home out of fear patients may infect them. A percentage will be
out sick themselves or caring for family members who are ill.
Even if they are not ill, they may need to stay home to take
care of children because schools are closed.
There is no surge capacity for supplies such as syringes, IV
bags, masks and antiviral drugs. Everything is based on
just-in-time delivery. Because supplies of vaccines and
antiviral drugs will be inadequate, large numbers of deaths will
occur.
Hospitals around the nation are not set up to handle the
capacity needed for an influenza pandemic and will be
overwhelmed. Serious advanced planning is needed now to handle
this potential pandemic crisis.