London

London hospitals overcapacity as calls to wear masks grow

As Canada is in the grip of an influenza epidemic, hospitals in London are grappling with rising system pressures from the spread of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), COVID-19 and the flu.

Both adult and pediatric hospitals are experiencing record occupancy

hospital
London's Children's Hospital is at 115 per cent overall occupancy, a number higher than they've ever seen, officials say. (Yan Theoret/CBC News)

Hospitals in London are grappling with space to treat patients as a record number people fall ill with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), COVID-19 and the flu.

Children's Hospital was at 115 per cent overall occupancy Tuesday night, the highest number hospital officials at London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC) said they've seen.  

Occupancy in the adult emergency of Victoria Hospital and University Hospital were operating above 100 per cent capacity, with pressure on intensive care and other inpatient units.

The Public Health Agency of Canada recently declared the "start of an influenza epidemic" and said the spread is "above expected levels typical of this time of year" in their FluWatch report.

Last week, three people died last from COVID-19 and one person from influzena in the Middlesex-London region, according to the Middlesex-London Health Unit. 

The average wait time in the children's emergency department is now between six and eight hours for non-urgent concerns due to the rise in patients with RSV and influenza, officials say. Last week, LHSC reported 20 hour wait times at emergency departments for non-emergent concerns. 

Masking now strongly recommended indoors

LHSC is asking the public to mask up after facing a "significant surge" in pressures in their emergency departments, intensive care units and inpatient units, officials said in a statement.

A box of masks and sanitizer sits on a table.
LHSC officials say they support the government’s recommendation for individuals to mask in public places. (CBC / Radio-Canada)

"We anticipate significant ongoing pressures in the coming weeks and support the government's recommendation for individuals to mask in public places, as we know masking is one of the most effective tools for preventing disease transmission."

Ontario's chief medical officer of health Dr. Kieran Moore announced masks are now strongly recommended in all indoor public settings by as the province's health system faces "extraordinary pressures" in a news conference Monday.