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Dire scenario for intensive care even if COVID-19 infection rate drops: study

A study by Toronto epidemiologists suggests that Canada's largest province could run out of intensive care beds and ventilators by late April, even assuming a sharp drop in the current infection rate.
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A study by Toronto epidemiologists suggests that Canada's largest province could run out of intensive care beds and ventilators by late April, even assuming a sharp drop in the current infection rate.

Researchers from the University of Toronto, University Health Network and Sunnybrook Hospital have released a model showing Ontario could run short of machines and space to ventilate very sick patients in just over five weeks.

In work led by Beate Sander, the Canada research chair in economics of infectious diseases, even a "conservative scenario" assuming a lower rate of infection than is currently occurring would lead to serious shortages.

That scenario assumes the average daily rate of infections over the 37 days would be 7.5 per cent, the rate Japan has experienced, compared with the 26 per cent daily rate that has been experienced recently.

It also assumes that hospitals would succeed in holding 25 per cent of the province's 2,053 existing intensive care beds for COVID-19 patients, though most experts say typically 85 to 90 per cent of the beds are occupied by patients with other illnesses.

Sander said in an interview she hopes the research leads to "informed decision-making" on public health measures.

A more optimistic model by her group predicts that if the province manages to increase capacity for COVID-19 patients by adding more than 2,000 beds and 600 ventilators, the system could hold up for 60 days, but there "may still be a critical shortage of ventilators."

The study assumes the average stay in the intensive care unit would be eight days. 

The models haven't yet included factors with a potential to slow the virus's spread, such as the impact of the recent border restrictions or the closure of schools.

There is also a "worst case scenario" incorporating higher rates of infection experienced in Italy. That would see the Ontario system run out of ICU beds and ventilators in just 16 days.

Over the past week, some provincial health ministers have been announcing plans to purchase ventilators.

Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott told reporters on Wednesday, "We certainly have an adequate supply for what we're dealing with right now."

She then noted the province had ordered 300 more ventilators that it expected to receive shortly and said automobile parts manufacturers are looking to retool so they can produce some ventilators in Ontario.

"We know with many borders shutting down, we need to find our own source internally," she said.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said, "Alberta Health Services advises us that they have adequate supplies to deal with this crisis," and said the province had ordered 50 ventilators.

Quebec Premier Francois Legault said his province has enough ventilators and will acquire more if demand increases. "In the short term, we have all the equipment we need," he said Thursday.

In British Columbia, Health Minister Adrian Dix said he would make the number of new ventilators public as they arrived, adding the province currently has a total of 1,272.

In Manitoba, Health Minister Cameron Friesen said on Thursday 27 additional ventilators are "on the way," which would the province's total to 270. In Saskatchewan, as of Wednesday, the Saskatchewan Health Authority says it has 91 ventilators for critical care, another 80 ventilators for sub-acute care and has ordered 50 more.

In Newfoundland and Labrador, health officials said in the province has 156 ventilators and 20 more have been ordered. In Prince Edward Island, there are 19 ventilators and the province says it is attempting to reach a supplier to order more. Nova Scotia has ordered 140 ventilators which would bring its supply to about 240.

But epidemiologists say these kinds of figures may fall short unless much more extreme social distancing and other public health measures occur across the country.

David Fisman, an epidemiologist at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health, said Sander is "a fantastic modeller" but added the 37-day projection is optimistic. "We crash into a cliff much faster than that in our estimates," he said.

"If people say Beate's projections are dire, please note that there are non-ridiculous projections that are somewhat worse."

A study using data from 2010 found that nationally there were about 3,170 intensive care beds capable of operating ventilators. Those  figures are being updated, says Dr. Robert Fowler, a Sunnybrook Hospital researcher and physician.

He said that figure has gone up since 2010, probably by "hundreds," but he won't know for at least another week what the total is.

Fisman said it remains unclear how long patients will remain in hospital on the breathing machines, and how many intensive care beds will be occupied by patients with illnesses other than COVID-19.

"Because people who have this disease stay in the ICU a long time and lock up a ventilator bed, that means it doesn't take a very big epidemic to completely log jam our health care system as it stands," he said.

"That's why we have to stop this virus in the community," Fisman said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 20, 2020.

Michael Tutton, The Canadian Press