N.S. hospitals no longer have designated COVID-19 units - Action News
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Nova Scotia

N.S. hospitals no longer have designated COVID-19 units

Hospitals in Nova Scotia are no longer putting patients with COVID-19 in a separate unit from patients without COVID-19.

Health authority removed designated units last month, moving to care in place model

Emergency entrance to the Halifax Infirmary is shown.
Hospitals in Nova Scotia no longer have designated COVID-19 units. This file photo shows the emergency entrance of the QEII in Halifax. (Robert Short/CBC)

Nova Scotians who are admitted to the hospital while sick with COVID-19 are no longer being treated in a unitseparatefrom patients who have not contracted the virus.

The province has been moving away from designated COVID-19 units for some time. The last ones closed in mid-July.

It's now using a "care in place" model, meaning all patients will be treated in whichever unit or facility of the hospital that meets their needs,regardless of COVID-19 status.

Patients with COVID-19are placed in a private room or cohorted with other patients who have the virus or have recently recovered from it, saidDr. Shelly McNeil, senior medical director for COVIDplanning and implementation for Nova Scotia Health.

Patients with COVID-19must wear masks when outside of their rooms, andare only allowed to leave their rooms for necessary tests and procedures.

McNeil called itthe "gradual evolution" of dealing withCOVID-19 in the health care system.

"We're seeing a shift to patients that tend to be complex medically, so they have lots of underlying medical problems, and COVID is tipping them over the edge, so to speak, with regard to other medical problems,"McNeil said.

Dr. Shelly McNeil, the senior medical director of COVID-19 planning and implementation with Nova Scotia Health Authority, said the move is part of the evolution of COVID-19 care. (CBC)

"It mightbe making their underlying lung disease worse, or their underlying heart disease worse, or other things. So they're not needing the same type of intensive respiratory support that we were seeing in the beginning phases of the pandemic."

The removal of COVID-19 units means there arelongerdesignated beds held for COVID-19 patients. Those beds areinstead put into the regular rotation of medicine and hospital services, ideally improving flow for patients through the hospital.

"There's been lots of pressure in the emergency department, high volumes of patients for a whole lot of different problems. So we're still having, of course, significant flow challenges. We're just hoping that in doing this, it streamlines the impact COVID would have on those challenges," she said.

ACOVID-19 physician consultation service has been established in each health zone, and is available 24/7, to support clinical decision making for patients with the virus, including whether they need to move to the ICU in cases of severe disease.

The seven-day isolation period for Nova Scotia Health employees who test positive for the virus remainsin place, as does the vaccine mandate for health care workers.

McNeil said NSH will continue to monitor the COVID-19 situationand reassess operational plans as needed, which could include bringing back designated COVID-19 units if the situation worsens.