Inslee deploys National Guard to assist hospitals, testing

  • By Rachel La Corte The Associated Press
  • Friday, January 14, 2022 1:30am
  • NewsCoronavirus

By Rachel La Corte

The Associated Press

OLYMPIA — Gov. Jay Inslee is deploying 100 members of the state National Guard to some hospitals to set up testing sites and to assist in non-medical tasks amid crowding due to a spike in COVID-19 hospitalizations.

Inslee announced Thursday that teams will be deployed to assist four overcrowded emergency departments at hospitals in Everett, Yakima, Wenatchee and Spokane, and that testing teams will be based at hospitals in Olympia, Richland, Seattle and Tacoma.

There are plans for additional Federal Emergency Management Agency testing sites in King and Snohomish counties.

Inslee’s office said that, with a 75 percent increase in COVID hospitalizations over the first week of the new year, hospitals leaders and physicians have said they are in a crisis.

National Guard members will be deployed to the emergency departments at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital in Yakima, Confluence Health/Central Washington Hospital in Wenatchee and Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center & Children’s Hospital in Spokane. They also will set up testing sites outside of Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, Kadlec Regional Medical Center in Richland, UW Medicine/Harborview Medical Center in Seattle and MultiCare Tacoma General Hospital in Tacoma.

Inslee’s announcement comes a day after Oregon Gov. Kate Brown said she was deploying 1,200 Oregon National Guard members to more than 50 hospitals across the state.

Inslee also is requiring hospitals to temporarily halt non-urgent procedures for four weeks to ease the pressure on capacity for emergency patients. He also urged hospitals to use a third-party contract that brings in out-of-state clinical and non-clinical staff to help with health care staffing. Inslee’s office said there are more than 300 personnel available to hospitals under the contract the state entered into last August.

Inslee said that help is also needed for the state’s long-term care providers who are facing shortages in staffing, affecting their ability to admit people from acute care hospitals. He said several steps are being taken to address that, including deploying additional staff to work with patients on transition planning, and providing resources to expedite guardianship proceedings to accelerate the movement of people who need a guardian from hospitals to less restrictive settings.

Inslee is also calling on retired health care workers to return to the workforce temporarily, asking for those who can help with testing, vaccinating, working in the hospital or other locations to sign up at WAServ.org.

As of Thursday, the state had more than 1 million confirmed or probable cases since the start of the pandemic and 10,103 deaths.

More than 78 percent of the population age 5 and older has received at least one dose of vaccine, and more than 71 percent is fully vaccinated.

As of this week, more than 2.1 million people have either received a booster or a third dose, according to the Department of Health.

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