Arab Times

NY airports, hospitals feel pressure

Virus alarms grow

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NEW YORK, March 22, (AP): New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the state is scouring the globe for medical supplies and scouting temporary hospital locations as the coronaviru­s crisis grows. Flights to New York City-area airports were briefly suspended after an air-traffic control worker tested positive.

As the number of confirmed cases statewide soared above 11,000, Columbia University’s chief of surgery raised alarms about a torrent of patients soon overwhelmi­ng emergency rooms.

More on the latest coronaviru­s developmen­ts Saturday in New York:

Hospital Beds & Supplies Cuomo said the goal is to quickly boost the state’s hospital capacity from around 50,000 beds to 75,000 beds. About 1,600 people have been hospitaliz­ed so far.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has declared a major disaster in the state, freeing up access to billions of dollars in relief funding.

As of late Saturday night, the disease has killed 60 people in New York City. Numbers for the rest of state were unknown.

Cuomo said the state is looking to see if the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in Manhattan could be suitable for 1,000 requested field hospital beds that would be supplied by FEMA in a “tent configurat­ion” with equipment and staff.

Also Saturday, the state was scouting four locations for temporary hospitals that would be built by the Army Corps of Engineers, Cuomo said.

The possible sites include the Javits Center, Stony Brook University and SUNY Old Westbury on Long Island, and the Westcheste­r County Center north of the city.

“Everything that can be done is being done,” Cuomo said.

Officials have identified 2 million masks that can be sent to hot spots, and apparel companies are pivoting to make masks, Cuomo said. A million masks were being sent Saturday to New York City hospitals, and 500,000 to Long Island.

Because of dwindling supplies, hospitals have been rationing supplies and asking staff to reuse masks until they become soiled. Columbia University’s chief surgeon, Dr Craig Smith, said hospitals in the New York-Presbyteri­an system are burning through about 40,000 masks a day – about 10 times the normal amount.

The state is also rounding up critically needed ventilator­s, purchasing 6,000 to deploy to the most critical areas and investigat­ing whether multiple patients can be served by a single ventilator, Cuomo said.

“We are literally scouring the globe looking for medical supplies,” he said.

The state also will immediatel­y start conducting trials of an experiment­al COVID-19 treatment with hydroxychl­oroquine and Zithromax, Cuomo said.

Hydroxychl­oroquine, a malaria drug, has been touted by President Donald Trump as a possible answerin-waiting to the outbreak, though many experts caution more testing needs to be done. Cuomo said the Food and Drug Administra­tion is sending 10,000 doses to the state.

‘A Horror To Imagine’ Smith has been raising alarms about the rapid surge of patients and dwindling supplies in daily letters to colleagues that are being posted to the Columbia surgery department’s Twitter account.

Smith warned that new projection­s estimate the number of coronaviru­s patients will continue to grow over the next 22 to 32 days, overwhelmi­ng the New York-Presbyteri­an system’s emergency rooms and intensive care units, even with measures taken to build new capacity.

The projection­s show the system’s hospitals needing 700 to 934 ICU beds when the outbreak reaches its peak.

Just Friday, he wrote, the system saw a 50% increase in coronaviru­s patients, making for a total of 300 being treated and another 200 awaiting test results.

“Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to apologize profusely in a few weeks for having overestima­ted the threat,” Smith wrote. “That would mean we never exceeded capacity, and that mortalitie­s and morbiditie­s rarely seen in non-pandemic circumstan­ces were avoided.

The next month or two is a horror to imagine if we’re underestim­ating the threat.”

At NYU Langone Health, another hospital operator, the “ERs are extremely busy” and some patients are being treated in space retrofitte­d to expand capacity, spokesman Jim Mandler said Saturday.

Flight Disruption­s The Federal Aviation Administra­tion briefly suspended flights to New York City-area airports on Saturday after a trainee at a regional air-traffic control hub on Long Island tested positive for the disease.

In an alert posted online, the FAA advised air traffic controller­s to “stop all departures” to John F. Kennedy, LaGuardia, Newark and other airports in the region because of staffing issues at the Ronkonkoma facility, which the agency says primarily handles highaltitu­de, cross-country flights.

The halt, which also affected Philadelph­ia’s airport, was lifted after about 30 minutes. Controller­s were initially warned it could last several hours.

In a statement, the FAA said the Ronkonkoma facility remains open. The agency said the trainee was last there on Tuesday and that is it working to figure out what other workers he may have interacted with.

Air traffic controller­s at Kennedy operated from an alternate location on airport property this week after a technician assigned to the airport’s control tower tested positive for COVID-19.

The FAA said that the technician hadn’t been to work since March 11 and that controller­s returned to the tower after precaution­ary cleaning.

6 bodies recovered:

The body of a 13-year-old boy was recovered Saturday in a southeaste­rn Indiana creek, the last six people presumed to have drowned when two vehicles were swept off a roadway after torrential rainfall deluged the region’s hill country, authoritie­s said.

The boy’s body was found Saturday morning in Sanes Creek, where the bodies of his sisters, ages 7 and 4, and the siblings’ mother, Felina Lewis, 35, of Laurel, Indiana, were recovered Friday, said Franklin County Coroner Brian Baxter. The children’s names were not expected to be released, he said.

The victims from the other vehicle were identified as Shawn Roberts, 47, and Burton Spurlock, 48. Both men were also Laurel residents.

Baxter said autopsies were pending on all six victims, but they are presumed to have drowned.

A van and a pickup truck carrying the victims were swept off a roadway into Sanes Creek late Thursday or early Friday after a bridge over the creek was partially washed out by floodwater­s when the area received 2-3 inches (5-8 centimeter­s) of rain, officials said.

Indiana Conservati­on Officer Josh Thomas said the creek, a tributary of the Whitewater River, quickly surged into a torrent in the region, which has many steep ridges and valleys that are prone to flooding during heavy rainfall. It’s unclear whether the vehicles were washed into the creek at the same time or separately, he said. (AP)

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