Rethinking Surge Preparedness After COVID-19: Effective Patient Load Balancing Within Health Systems and Beyond

Health Secur. 2022 Nov-Dec;20(6):497-503. doi: 10.1089/hs.2022.0059. Epub 2022 Nov 18.

Abstract

Within weeks of New York State's first confirmed case of COVID-19, New York City became the epicenter of the nation's COVID-19 pandemic. With more than 80,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations during the first wave alone, hospitals in downstate New York were forced to adapt existing procedures to manage the surge and care for patients facing a novel disease. Given the unprecedented surge, effective patient load balancing-moving patients from a hospital with diminishing capacity to another hospital within the same health system with relatively greater capacity-became chief among the capabilities required of New York health systems. The Greater New York Hospital Association invited members of downstate New York's 6 largest health systems to talk about how each of their systems evolved their patient load balancing procedures throughout the pandemic. Informed by their insights, experiences, lessons learned, and collaboration, we collectively present a set of consensus recommendations and best practices for patient load balancing at the facility and health system level, which may inform regional approaches to patient load balancing.

Keywords: COVID-19; Hospital Emergency Preparedness; Pandemic Response; Patient Load Balancing; Surge Management.

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19* / epidemiology
  • Hospitals
  • Humans
  • New York City / epidemiology
  • Pandemics
  • Surge Capacity