But even if patients can come back, will they?
Sammons said she knows some patients and families are still concerned with going to a hospital, and that some people have delayed or even avoided emergency care. Her colleagues are focused on telling patients what CHOP is doing to keep patients and staff safe, like moving chairs in waiting rooms and cafeterias to follow social distancing guidelines and making sure everyone wears masks.
On the other hand, some health care networks have also heard from patients who are very eager to get surgeries that have been put on hold. Elizabeth Cherot, chief medical officer at Axia Women’s Health, recalled a colleague telling her about a patient who was contacting her surgeon every week, upset that she has yet to have her gynecological surgery while her friend had knee surgery.
“There are patients who do have an appetite for getting their care, and are upset that they are being turned away or told to wait, and we’re obviously trying to delay that so that we’re not overwhelming our operating rooms,” Cherot said.
Last week, Axia Women’s Health started bringing patients back for routine care. Cherot said their preparations included building their own data dashboard, using information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Johns Hopkins University to monitor the pandemic to see how things are going. So if the situation is improving, Axia can consider bringing patients back; but if the numbers take a turn for the worse, they might have to once again consider which services are essential.
Health care networks resuming services say one reason they are coming back now is increased access to COVID-19 testing.
For instance, at the start of the pandemic, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center could only do around 20 tests a day, and now they can do more than 1,600 tests a day with a combination of in-house tests, state tests, and outside labs, said Donald Yealy, senior medical director and chair of emergency medicine.
He said the network can test almost anyone who has COVID-19 symptoms in the region, and have expanded that to people who do not have symptoms, including those coming in for medical procedures. He said the plan is to offer a test to anyone who comes to UPMC for any type of care by the end of the month, which would take up to 5,000 tests a day.
“If you’re enhancing your care capabilities without watching the community, you are almost playing with fire,” Yealy said. “We thought it was important to have an expanded testing capability and then finally to make sure that you have plans to turn on a dime again, if either the clinical cases or those acquired cases begin to increase in number … In other words, not just revving up and hoping that things work out.”