The city of Montgomery, Alabama, which has only one intensive care unit bed left, is sending sick patients to Birmingham, more than an hour away, officials said.
Montgomery Mayor Steven Reed said on Wednesday that of the four regional hospitals, one is short three ICU beds, two have no ICU beds, and one has just one bed.
“Right now, if you are from Montgomery, and you need an ICU bed, you are in trouble,” Reed said at a press conference. “If you’re from central Alabama, and you need an ICU bed, you may not be able to get one.”
The health care system in the state’s capital is “maxed out,” Reed said.
Alabama had 13,288 confirmed Covid-19 cases as of Thursday afternoon, according to Johns Hopkins University data. At least 528 people have died. That’s 2,358 more cases than reported the same time last week. At that time, 450 deaths had been reported.
Montgomery County has more than 1,000 cases and 28 people have died, according to the state health department’s data.
Al.com reported Wednesday that coronavirus cases have more than doubled since May 4 in the four counties that make up metropolitan Montgomery.
Reed told CNN his hope in using such stark terms was to get the attention of the public.
“This is a serious matter and we have to maintain our practices even as many people are relaxing restrictions and the economy is opening back up,” Reed said in a phone interview.
“We need to take more individual responsibility in how we go about our daily lives. In this community we are not in a safe place given the numbers we are seeing.”
Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, director of the division of infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told CNN’s “New Day” on Friday morning “It’s very worrisome.”
She said the holiday weekend and loosened restrictions could cause the virus to “go like a prairie fire … It is now really having the potential to get out of control.”
Social distancing and masks “really work,” she said. “This emphasis on personal responsibility is fantastic. If everybody did that we wouldn’t need to worry about arguing about these restrictions. The challenge is we all have different ideas of personal responsibility in a civil society.”
Study predicts spikes in parts of South
Southern locations like the Miami area, populous areas of Texas, and parts of Alabama and Tennessee will see rapid upticks in new Covid-19 cases, according to a new outbreak predictions model.
Most states across the country can ease some restrictions safely, but projects spikes in areas that have broadly reopened early, according to the model put together by a team at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania.
States that have lifted restrictions slowly and selectively might escape immediate resurgences, the model predicts.
The model also shows that states cannot count on summer weather to reduce transmission.
“While our models show that rising temperatures and humidity levels are having an impact on reducing the spread of Covid-19, those hot, humid days of summer are not going to eliminate the threat of virus resurgence,” said PolicyLab’s Dr. Gregory Tasian, senior scholar in the Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine.
“The areas of the south that our models project have a high risk of resurgence in the next few weeks may already be approaching their average summertime temperatures and humidity levels,” Tasian added.
“Therefore, their risk for seeing increasing case counts rests solely on how cautiously they reopen communities and manage crowding.”
Birmingham cases rising
In Birmingham, the most populous city in Alabama, coronavirus cases are also increasing sharply.
Jefferson County, where Birmingham is located, had 1,453 confirmed cases as of Thursday, according to the state’s health department data – which is a jump of 35% from the 1,075 cases reported two weeks ago. The county has had 85 deaths attributed to Covid-19.
Jefferson, Montgomery and Mobile counties are gaining attention as possible Covid-19 hotspots in the state, CNN affiliate WBRC reported. Those three had the highest numbers in the state as of Wednesday night, WBRC said.
Part of the increase can be attributed to increased testing, State Health Officer Dr. Karen Landers said, according to WBRC.
Reed said he was certain the shortage of ICU beds was directly related to the state loosening restrictions.
“That’s definitely a part of opening up too soon and not adhering to CDC guidelines,” Reed said.
Alabama’s reopening
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey’s stay-at-home order didn’t go into effect until April 4, and expired at the end of that month. Ivey replaced it with an order that eased restrictions.
As of May 11, restaurants and bars were allowed to serve customers on site, gyms and athletic facilities, hair and nail salons and barber shops were allowed to open. Groups of any size are allowed, as long as the 6 feet distance guidance is followed.
Ivey announced more reopenings that go into effect Friday, including entertainment venues, childcare facilities and summer camps.
Schools – public and private grade schools, technical schools, colleges and universities – are allowed to open next month.
Employees but not students will be asked to wear masks, with “reasonable steps” for social distancing and deep-cleaning of frequently used equipment.
Many patients in Montgomery area hospitals are not from the city, but rather from rural areas where the health care systems cannot meet the needs of the community, Reed said.
“We don’t want to lose anyone, any life, because we don’t have the resources to treat them in this community,” Reed said. “I want us to really think about the seriousness of that because none of us know who will need that ICU bed today, and who may need that this evening, tomorrow, or this extended Memorial Day weekend.”
CNN’s Jay Croft, Gisela Crespo and Maggie Fox contributed to this report.