By Peter Hancock
Governor JB Pritzker said Tuesday the State is stockpiling medical supplies and working to expand its hospital capacity, even by converting some closed hotels into isolation facilities, as it braces for a sharp increase in demand due to the outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease, COVID-19 (coronavirus).
“In a worst-case scenario surge, the State would turn existing hospitals into almost entirely COVID-19 response hospitals, moving non-COVID-19 patients to other hospitals, including these re-outfitted locations,” Pritzker said during his daily briefing in Chicago.
Meanwhile, Illinois Department of Public Health director Dr. Ngozi Ezike reported 250 new confirmed cases of the disease in the State, including four additional deaths, bringing the total to 1,535 cases and 16 deaths. Grundy County is now the 32nd Illinois county with at least one confirmed case.
Those numbers would have been substantially worse, Pritzker said, without the social restrictions he put in place, such as closing schools, bars, and restaurants, issuing a stay-at-home order, and urging people to practice social distancing.
“In our worst-case scenario projections – that is without the stay-at-home order – in one week, we would need over 2,500 more non-ICU beds and 800 ICU beds than we have in existence in the entire State today,” Pritzker said. “Further still, in two weeks, we would need over 28,000 additional non-ICU beds, and over 9,400 additional ICU beds. That’s untenable.”
In addition to that, he said that without protective measures, the State would need 4,100 more ventilators to outfit ICU beds within two weeks.
Pritzker said hospitals in Illinois are operating at a little more than 50-percent capacity in their non-ICU units and 57.4-percent capacity in ICU beds. Approximately 28 percent of the state’s 2,229 ventilators are in use at this time, he added.
In addition to expanding their capacity, Pritzker said hospitals throughout the State are setting up triage tents where patients displaying symptoms can be prioritized. It has set up four drive-thru testing sites in the Chicago area, including one operated by the Illinois National Guard. The other three are being operated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, in partnership with Walgreen’s and Walmart.
Pritzker said laboratories in the State are processing about 2,000 tests per day, up from about 50 per day at the start of the outbreak, which partially accounts for the rapidly rising number of confirmed cases. Officials have repeatedly stressed that because many people have not been tested, the actual number of cases is probably much higher.
Pritzker said that after he spoke with president Donald Trump Monday, he has been assured that Illinois will receive 300 more ventilators and 300,000 N95 masks from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
Neither Pritzker nor Ezike would offer a prediction for how long the social restrictions would remain in place, but Pritzker did take issue with president Trump, who said Tuesday he would like to see the country “opened up” by Easter, which is April 12, less than three weeks away.
“I think the president is not taking into account the true damage that this will do to our country if we see truly millions of people die,” he said. “And that’s what I think would happen. That’s what the scientists, doctors tell us would happen. And you heard me say a little bit earlier, if you don’t have these restrictions on, the damage that would be done, the lives that would be lost, the overrunning of our health care system would lead to real devastation. So, I’m very, very concerned about what the president is saying.”
Pritzker did, however, acknowledge the State’s economy is likely to suffer due to the restrictions, and that state revenues are likely to suffer as well, which could lead to budget cuts.
Pritzker said he has been meeting with the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget, as well as with deputy governor, Dan Hynes, to get an estimate of how steep the downturn in revenue will be, suggesting there might need to be spending cuts for the remainder of the current fiscal year and adjustments to the budget plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1.
—Capitol News Illinois