the patients are being moved by roads and by air, co-ordinated by ornge, ontario’s not-for-profit provider of critical care transport.
during this third wave, ornge activated a “surge response team” for temporary critical-care land ambulance resources, hooking up with local paramedic services for assistance, said joshua mcnamara, a spokesman for ornge.
from january 1 to april 20, ornge arranged to move 1,238 patients, he said.
almost half of them were this month.
there were 209 patients transported in january; 217 in february; 242 in march; and 570 from april 1 to 21, according to the company. of those patients, 680 were moved by local paramedic services and 558 by ornge — 497 by road, 39 by helicopter and 22 by airplanes.
detsky said icu admissions will continue to climb for as long as covid keeps surging. one statistic lags the other.
“i look at the daily numbers,” he said. “the cases from today, a certain percentage of them are going to be critically ill in the coming days to two weeks. we can anticipate that.
“we won’t see the icu numbers start to come down until the case numbers come down in the province.”
despite dire circumstances, detsky takes solace from the dedication of colleagues in other regions, he said.