Seventy-two patients are currently in critical condition, and 51 of those are on ventilators, state officials said. In the last two weeks, 50 patients with COVID-19 have died.
Carney said Tuesday that hospital leaders had been urging him to require masks even as he chose to push voluntary compliance during several public briefings. He acknowledged during a virtual briefing that with hospitals statewide “bursting at the seams,’’ he decided to act because it was obvious his pleas had not persuaded the public to wear masks to slow the rapid-fire spread through communities.
He finally issued the order at 2 p.m. Monday. It applies to workers and patrons of supermarkets, restaurants and bars, malls and other retail stores, hair salons, casinos and other public establishments. Houses of worship are exempted.
“We take one day at a time,’’ Carney said. “Hindsight is 20-20.”
The decision was a 180-degree shift for Carney. He has said for weeks, even as the highly contagious omicron strain began spreading through the country and state, that he did not want to put in more emergency rules, which he had finally lifted in July after 16 months. He had, however, continued to require masks in schools and government buildings, and on public transit.
Carney had explained during recent briefings that he didn’t want to harm businesses or tick off residents by limiting indoor gatherings or reinstituting a mask mandate for employees and customers.
Instead he kept pushing people to get vaccinated and if eligible, boosted. To date, 90% of Delaware adults have received at least one shot, but only 60% of residents age 12 to 34 have done so. For children ages 5 to 11, the rate is just 25%.
Yet on Monday, most hospitals statewide released a joint statement that said Delaware’s “health care system has been stretched beyond capacity.’’ So for the first time in history, ChristianaCare and several other healthcare systems decided that “normal standards of care” would be suspended and replaced with a “crisis of care” standard.
Only then did Carney act.
‘Didn’t want to leave any tool on the table’
Carney was asked Tuesday why he waited so long even though his health advisers and hospital leaders have been sounding the alarm during his recent briefings about the super-surge of cases and the burden on caregivers.
“Obviously, we know where we are now, but we could never predict where we would be,” Carney responded.
While it’s true that his advisers and hospital executives never predicted just how high the number of cases and those needing inpatient care would go, they weren’t hesitant in expressing their fears of a looming catastrophe.
Consider Carney’s briefing on Dec. 21, with daily cases already above the January 2021 peak. During the session ChristianaCare chief operating officer Sharon Kurfuerst bluntly stated that “the situation is dire” at Christiana and Wilmington hospitals, which were then up to 115% of inpatient capacity depending on the day.
“There are patients receiving care in hallways because that’s the only place we have to put them in the emergency department right now,’’ Kurfuerst said then. “Our staffing is stretched and we are juggling supply chain and equipment needs every day in order to ensure we are providing care to patients.”