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People Without COVID Are Dying Because Hospitals Are Full of Unvaxxed Patients

The daughter of an Iowa man who died after waiting two weeks for a hospital bed blames unvaccinated COVID patients for “clogging” hospitals.
RUBEN BONILLA GONZALO​/Getty Images​​
RUBEN BONILLA GONZALO/Getty Images

The daughter of an Iowa man who died after waiting two weeks for a hospital bed blames unvaccinated COVID patients for “clogging” hospitals, she told the Des Moines Register this week. 

And as the U.S. begins to see record-breaking case numbers—the U.S. is currently recording more new cases per day than at any other point of the pandemic—that threaten to overwhelm an already fragile healthcare system, the sad case could be a lesson for people still on the fence about getting vaccinated. 

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Dale Weeks, a retired school superintendent in southern Iowa, went to MercyOne Centerville Medical Center on Nov. 1 after he began to feel ill, his family told the Des Moines Register. Weeks was diagnosed with sepsis, but the hospital had no open bed for him. “They told my dad and his wife right away they had no beds,” Jenifer Owenson, Weeks’ daughter, told the Register.

At the time Weeks was admitted, Iowa was in the midst of a fall surge that resulted in more hospitalizations than at any other point of the pandemic save for last winter. 

The next day, Weeks was taken to a hospital 80 miles away, where he was given intravenous antibiotics but nothing more could be done to treat the infection, according to the Register. 

“In addition to an increased number of COVID-19 cases and spread of the delta and omicron variants, hospitals across the country are dealing with traumas and experiencing multiple types of illness,” Marcy Peterson, a spokesperson for MercyOne, told the Register.

“This demand is coupled with a reduced number of staff to care for patients. These challenges can strain available resources and contribute to delays in care or other complications for patients.”

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Finally, Weeks was taken to University of Iowa Hospitals on Nov. 17, and it was another nine days before he underwent a 17-hour stomach surgery to treat what one surgeon said was one of the worst infections he’d ever seen, the Register reported. 

Two days after the surgery, on Nov. 28, Weeks died at the age of 78. 

“It’s infuriating that people who are not vaccinated are clogging [hospitals] up,” Owenson told the Register. On Tuesday, Owenson told the Washington Post: “It was terribly frustrating being told, ‘There’s not a bed yet’... There was this logjam to get him in anywhere.”

As of Tuesday, unvaccinated people made up more than 80 percent of COVID-19 patients in Iowa hospitals, and 83 percent of those in the ICU, according to the state health department

Weeks is unfortunately not the first non-COVID patient to die while being denied healthcare due to an overrun system. In August, 46-year-old U.S. Army veteran Daniel Wilkinson went to a hospital in Texas suffering from gallstone pancreatitis—a treatable illness—while doctors raced to find a hospital with the capacity to treat him. He was airlifted to a hospital in Houston, but it was too late, and he died. 

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And in September, 73-year-old Alabaman Ray DeMonia suffered a cardiac event and died after being turned away from more than 40 ICUs that didn’t have the capacity to treat him, his family said. 

“In honor of Ray, please get vaccinated if you have not, in an effort to free up resources for non COVID related emergencies,” DeMonia’s family wrote in his obituary. “Due to COVID 19, [Cullman Regional Medical Center] emergency staff contacted 43 hospitals in 3 states in search of a Cardiac ICU bed and finally located one in Meridian, Mississippi. He would not want any other family to go through what his did.”

Since Weeks’ death, the nation’s hospitals have been hit by yet another setback in the fight against COVID—the highly transmissible Omicron variant. Though the Delta is still the dominant strain in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) region that includes Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, and Missouri, the CDC says Omicron now makes up a quarter of all cases there. Experts expect that Omicron will soon overtake Delta in most places as it has in New York and Washington D.C. 

There are encouraging signs that Omicron could result in less severe disease than other variants, including Delta, though it’s unclear whether that’s due to protection conferred by vaccines and prior infection, or due to this variant’s reduced virulence. But epidemiologists and public health officials fear that the sheer magnitude of infections—there are now more positive cases daily any at any other point during the pandemic—could push hospitals beyond the breaking point. 

“We are seeing longer lines in the emergency room, we are seeing hospitals filling up with more and more COVID positive cases, which means we have to cut back on electives and routine health care needs,” Dr. April Kapu, the president of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, told VICE News last week. “So that's frustrating. We want to be able to move along and continue to provide healthcare to everyone.” 

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