All 43 patients in Cleveland Clinic's Medical Intensive Care Unit (MICU), on the main campus, are sick with COVID-19 and about two-thirds of them are on ventilators, Cleveland Clinic officials said Tuesday.
Cleveland Clinic invited 海角破解版 health reporters into the intensive care unit on Wednesday to talk about how this is the worst they have seen through the pandemic. The hospital does not typically allow reporters into this area.
The patients on the floor were too sick to be interviewed, but reporters were present when family members were there saying goodbye to loved ones.
In one corner of the ICU, some family members stood outside a room, crying, as doctors prepared to take their loved one off a ventilator.
鈥淭hat, you just watched -- that鈥檚 probably somebody that is dying," said the Clinic鈥檚 ICU director Dr. Eduardo Mireles.
鈥淭his is the worst I鈥檝e ever seen,鈥 said Stephanie Dota, who works in respiratory care at the Clinic
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if there鈥檚 a strong enough word for how sick of this we all are," said Dota. "Some families don鈥檛 believe it鈥檚 COVID, so it鈥檚 hard to get through to them."
Staff shared how heartbreaking it is to have to decide when patients have to come off the ventilator and to withdraw all care.
Kathryn Carson puts on the robe, gloves, and mask required to enter a COVID-19 patient's room. [Lisa Ryan / 海角破解版]
The crush of COVID-19 patients in the ICU has left no room for people with other illnesses, officials said.
Normally, there are patients with a variety of illnesses in the MICU, said Dr. Hassan Khouli, chairman of Critical Care Medicine. But as COVID-19 infections have surged, the unit that serves the hospitals' sickest patients has filled up with people suffering complications of COVID-19 infections.
鈥淭hese are numbers, but these are also human lives,鈥 Dr. Khouli said.
Cleveland Clinic officials said the infections are the worst hospital officials have seen during the pandemic, not just in numbers but also in terms of how sick patients are. The MICU beds are full, and they have to move patients to make room for sicker patients, he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of a revolving door,鈥 said Nurse Manager Claire Strauser.
The harsh truth is that many of those who are treated in the MICU will never go home.
About 18% will die, said Khouli.
Among those on a ventilator, the risk of death is even greater. About a third will be lost, he said.
Some people think the ventilator is a death sentence, but doctors say it鈥檚 a lifesaving tool that can help a person recover.
On Monday, the hospital said it was "near capacity" in a tweet and asked the public to get vaccinated against the disease.
The number of hospitalized patients w/ COVID-19 is among the highest since the pandemic started. The vast majority are unvaccinated.
— ClevelandClinicNews (@CleClinicNews)
They are fathers. Mothers. Sisters. Sons. Neighbors.
Care in our hospitals is safe, but we're near capacity.
Please help us. Get vaccinated.
The vast majority of those in the ICU are unvaccinated, said Andrea Pacetti, a Cleveland Clinic spokesperson.
As of Monday, there were 811 COVID-19 patients hospitalized at Cleveland Clinic facilities across the state, she said. Nearly 30% of those were in the MICU.