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WATCH: Utah officials urge residents to do their part as COVID-19 cases climb

UPDATED: OCTOBER 29, 2020 AT 12:17 PM
BY
News Director

SALT LAKE CITY — Ten more Utahns have died as COVID-19 cases continue to climb in Utah. Thursday, the state reported an additional 1,837 cases of the virus and a seven day rolling average of percent positive test results of 18.1%. 

Gov. Gary Herbert, Utah Department of Health Epidemiologist Dr. Angela Dunn, and other state government and health leaders warned state residents to do their part to keep coronavirus from spreading over concern that hospitals could quickly become overwhelmed.

Speaking directly to Utah residents, Herbert expressed his frustration with the continuing pandemic. 

“We know the pandemic is very disruptive in our lives. It’s getting old,” he said.

But he added the hospitals are struggling.

“They can’t keep up,” Herbert said. 

Encouraging Utah residents to wear masks and continue social distancing as COVID-19 cases climb, Herbert sounded stern. 

“This is no longer a polite request,” he said of masks. “It is a requirement.” 

COVID-19 cases climb in Utah

The ten additional deaths reported on Thursday represent Utahns who lived in every corner of the state. They included: 

The Utah Department of Health reported 1,837 Utahns tested positive for COVID-19 Thursday, for a total of 110,640 since the beginning of the pandemic. 

State officials say Utah hospitals currently house 317 Utahns for COVID-19 treatment. According to coronavirus.utah.gov, 123 of those patients require intensive care unit treatment. 

A warning from hospital leaders

Dr. Mark Shah, an emergency room physician, said patients who need care for other ailments beyond COVID-19 should understand what overwhelming the health care system would mean. 

For COVID-19 alone, he stressed the virus is not just the cold or the flu. 

“About 5% of patients will likely be hospitalized. And 20% to 30% go on to require intensive care,” Shah said.

Shah said Utah has already begun asking other states for help and moving patients around to relieve stress on the hospitals bearing the brunt. 

“We are diverting patients away from hospitals that are stressed,” Shah said. “These contingency efforts may fall short.” 

The challenge, he pointed out, goes beyond available beds: staffing affects how many patients a facility can treat. COVID-19 patients and those needing attention for other conditions may not get the care they need simply because the hospital doesn’t have enough staff. 

“I understand the negative impact this can have on patients and providers,” Shah said. 

An impossible choice

Crisis standards of care could mean facilities must choose which patients receive treatment. 

“In times of scarcity we need to do the greatest good for the greatest number,” Shah said, a decision he noted includes the probability of survival. “We cannot continue to argue about masking. We cannot continue to argue about whether this pandemic is real or made-up.” 

“This is about heart attack patients who might not be able to get into a hospital quickly enough to get treatment. This is about patients waiting hours and hours for emergency care or surgery,” said Rich Saunders, the director of the Utah Department of Health. “Our hospitals are obviously still caring for patients. But they are stretched very thin, and we’ve got to join together to alleviate this problem.”

Herbert said he understood Utah’s mortality rate remains low, but that should not mean Utahns ease up in proper precautions. The national mortality rate remains about five times higher than Utah’s; however, he said long-term ramifications from the virus also pose concerns. 

“It’s not just mortality we should be concerned about,” Herbert said, talking about his 13-year-old grandchild who, weeks later, still does not have a sense of taste. 

“The information we have heard today is sobering. We have been transparent and forthright from the beginning. We have been telling the public since the beginning of the pandemic that we could overwhelm our hospitals,” Herbert said. “We are far too close.”

This story is developing and will be updated.