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May 31, 2025

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3 Top Story

Hospitals Approach Capacity as State Reports Largest One-Day Spike in Infections

December 22, 2021 by Maryland Matters

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Hospital staffing shortages and a wave of COVID-19 patients — almost all of them unvaccinated — threaten to overwhelm the state’s healthcare facilities in the coming weeks, Maryland leaders warned on Tuesday.

And they beseeched residents to get COVID-19 boosters, wear masks and avoid gathering in large groups over the holidays.

With Christmas just days away and the now-dominant omicron variant spreading rapidly, Marylanders continued to queue for tests at libraries and clinics, though many found that supplies were exhausted by the time they reached the head of the line.

Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R), who tested positive on Monday and is under quarantine at Government House, pledged $100 million to address staffing concerns and increase the test supply. He did not reimpose a mask mandate, despite pleas for him to do so.

Meanwhile, the state posted its largest single-day increase in cases — 6,216 — since the pandemic began. There were 1,392 COVID patients in Maryland hospitals as of Tuesday morning, a one-day increase of 34. And the 7-day positivity rate popped again — to 11.64%.

State data on COVID deaths has not been updated since a Dec. 4 cyberattack.

“In 20 years of practicing emergency medicine within the military and as a civilian, these are some of the most challenging times I have ever seen in health care,” said Dr. David Marcozzi, the COVID-19 incident commander for the University of Maryland Medical System.

“This week the University of Maryland Medical System will surpass the highest number of admitted COVID patients since the start of this pandemic, with many hospitals at or near capacity,” he added.

Marcozzi said “exceedingly long waits” in emergency departments and delays in surgery — for COVID and non-COVID patients alike — can be expected. “This isn’t just a COVID problem any more.”

Hogan recorded a video message from the governor’s mansion due to his positive test results. Sounding hoarse, the two-time cancer survivor said he’s “doing fine and only experiencing some cold-like symptoms.” He wore a blue track suit emblazoned with a Maryland Army National Guard patch as he spoke in front of a Christmas tree.

The governor said he was making $25 million available to address staffing needs at hospitals and another $25 million for nursing homes; $30 million will go to increase testing in Maryland schools.

The state will make half a million tests available through local health departments and at BWI Airport, and the Maryland Department of Health is expanding operations at testing facilities in Baltimore and in Anne Arundel and Prince George’s counties.

Maryland National Guard personnel will staff testing sites, as they did during the vaccination surge earlier this year.

Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) reimposed a mask mandate on Monday.

Marcozzi, whose recorded remarks were shown after the governor’s, said the increase in hospitalizations is being driven primarily by people who are not fully vaccinated. He also said Marylanders “have become too relaxed with our protective measures. From businesses to churches, we need to reinstate preventive measures — and we need to do so today.”

At a press conference in Baltimore County on Monday, Gail Cunningham, chief medical officer at University of Maryland St. Joseph Medical Center, said the staffing challenge and patient surge have combined to produce “a health crisis in Maryland.”

“I would recommend mandating masks again,” she told reporters.

A Hogan spokesman declined to comment.

Cunningham spoke at an event organized by Baltimore County Executive Johnny A. Olszewski Jr. (D), who announced Tuesday that he had tested positive. Like Hogan, he is twice-vaccinated and has had a booster.

“I’m asymptomatic and currently feel fine,” Olszewski said on Twitter. “This is a critical reminder of the challenges we all continue face amid the highly contagious Omicron variant.”

The governor said he expects the spike in cases and hospitalizations will peak in mid-late January, though that is when the state typically experiences an uptick in influenza cases. “We will continue to constantly monitor this surge and take additional actions as need.”

Local leaders across Maryland are taking their own steps to boost testing capabilities and to encourage people to get tested before gathering with loved ones.

Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman (D) announced plans to distribute 100,000 free at-home rapid test kits.

Baltimore officials are using libraries to distribute tests, though lines were long and many people who showed up were not able to secure a test.

Prince George’s leaders defend shift to virtual learning

In the face of criticism from Hogan, Prince George’s Executive Angela D. Alsobrooks (D) defended the decision to temporarily shift from in-person to virtual learning in the county’s schools.

Schools CEO Monica D. Goldson announced the shift last week after 994 students and 261 teachers tested positive, which “began to significantly impact learning and became disruptive to our school environment.”

“It was wise — given the numbers that we’ve seen — to make sure that we take immediate measures to contain the spread of the virus,” Alsobrooks said. “We know we’re in the middle of a surge.”

She said counties have been hampered by the cyberattack that hit Maryland Department of Health computers on Dec. 4. Nonetheless, residents can protect themselves by getting vaccinated and boosted, and limiting contact with others, she said.

While breakthrough cases can occur, Prince George’s Health Officer Dr. Ernest L. Carter said, “the illness is not nearly as severe when you get omicron and you’ve been vaccinated and boosted, as … if you hadn’t gotten vaccinated.”

The shift to virtual learning in Prince George’s took effect on Monday and will run until Jan. 18.

Speaking on Fox News on Sunday, Hogan called that move “a terrible mistake, and something we’re very opposed to.”

A potential candidate for president in 2024, the governor falsely accused the county of “shutting down an entire school system.”

Goldson said she made her decision in consultation with the state superintendent of schools. “(I) shared our issues and concerns here and received a response from him in support of the decision that I made.”

By Bruce DePuyt

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 3 Top Story Tagged With: capacity, coronavirus, Covid-19, Health, hospitals, staffing, unvaccinated

Hogan Names Acting Health Secretary as Concern About COVID Hospitalizations Mounts

December 2, 2020 by Maryland Matters

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Maryland’s hospital beds are filling up, as the state reported 2,765 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday morning. Twenty-one hospitals are at more than 90% capacity and 130 patients are receiving treatment in so-called “surge beds” across three temporary hospital facilities meant to avoid overcrowding.

“It’s a scary situation for everybody involved. …We think it’s going to continue to get worse over the next at least several weeks,” Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) said at a Tuesday press conference. “…Most of the educated projections say that we are not near the peak yet ― and that the worst part of this entire crisis is still ahead of us over the next month or two.”

Hogan announced a series of efforts on Tuesday aimed at alleviating burdens of health care workers, as a crush of post-Thanksgiving COVID patients are anticipated.

The 2,765 figure reported Tuesday is the third-highest daily total since the first reported case in Maryland eight months ago.

At least 4,516 Marylanders have died from the virus. The governor briefly paused during Tuesday’s press conference, choking back tears as he noted that the state recorded its youngest victim to date: a one-year-old boy.

More than 21,000 people have required hospitalization for treatment and 1,583 people were in hospital on Tuesday morning ― the highest figure since May 10. The state reported 350 COVID patients in intensive care units on Tuesday morning.

There are 6,816 Marylanders hospitalized for all illnesses; when the state reaches 8,000, hospitals will be required to expand their capacities by 10 percent within a week.

Every Maryland hospital is required to submit a surge plan to the state by Dec. 8.

“The current surge is not only increasing the burden on our healthcare system and filling available hospital beds, but it is also affecting our health care workers who are already spread thin and operating under immense strain and stress,” Hogan said.

State hospitals will need an additional 2,000 to 3,000 medical workers in the next few weeks to help alleviate round-the-clock staffing burdens. To recruit workers, the Department of Health and Maryland Hospital Association launched MarylandMedNow.com to fill temporary positions as doctors, nurses, clinical workers and support staff.

The state’s current hospital workers are already taking extra shifts and extra responsibilities, as well as sacrificing time away from their own families.

“Beds are filling up with significant numbers of patients, testing hospital surge plans, and our healthcare heroes: the nurses, doctors and other health care professionals to deliver that care in the most stressful environments,” said Dr. David Marcozzi, COVID-19 Incident Commander for the University of Maryland Medical System. “They persevere and are working extra shifts to carry the burden. That means potentially missing time at home during this holiday season. They do it for their patients, they do it to save lives. That said, those heroes are stretched thin, and we need to think innovatively on how to address potential staffing constraints.”

Hogan is also asking all Maryland colleges and universities to allow expedited graduation for students in health care fields and to develop emergency policies to award academic credit to any students who volunteer in health care during the pandemic.

Counties are being asked to deploy any available health care workers or other county employees to help staff testing and vaccination sites throughout the state.

The state is also urging hospitals and nursing homes to refocus workloads to shift non-medical duties away from nurses and licensed support staff, allowing them to focus on patient care.

New acting Health secretary

Hogan also announced Tuesday that the Maryland Department of Health’s Chief Operating Officer Dennis R. Schrader would become acting health secretary.

Tuesday marked the end of the tenure of Health Secretary Robert R. Neall, who announced in mid-November that he would retire from the Health Department after working for the administration for the last six years in various roles.

“He has been a longtime friend, trusted advisor and confidant and a dedicated public servant throughout his nearly four decades in public service ― most importantly as we went to war against this unprecedented deadly pandemic,” Hogan said, presenting Neall a governor’s citation. “We’re incredibly grateful to him for his service, and we wish him the very best in his retirement.”

Schrader, who has also been with the Hogan administration for six years, will step into the role immediately. Hogan said Schrader headed the state’s COVID testing and hospital surge efforts as chief operating officer.

Schrader was part of a confirmation battle over Hogan appointees in 2017, when the Maryland Senate refused to confirm him as Health secretary and the General Assembly ultimately passed a budget that temporarily stripped him of pay in the acting secretary position.

Hogan eventually appointed Neall to the position, ending the stalemate.

Hogan’s office did not immediately say Tuesday whether the governor intends to seek Schrader’s confirmation in the 2021 General Assembly or whether a different nominee will be put forward next year. Spokesman Michael Ricci said it was too early to discuss a timeframe on the appointment or next steps.

“Keep in mind that given Sec. Neall’s health concerns, we had to act on a compressed timeline to ensure continuity of leadership during the pandemic. Now that we have achieved that, we can look at next steps in the process,” Ricci said in an email.

Hogan also announced Tuesday that Acting Deputy Secretary for Public Health Services Dr. Jinlene Chan will lead Maryland’s vaccination acquisition and distribution efforts.

Hogan said Tuesday that the state is expected to receive a first batch of about 155,000 vaccines “relatively fast,” though that amount will cover only about half of the state’s frontline health care workers, and an even smaller portion of those Marylanders identified as priority recipients during Phase 1 of a vaccination plan.

“That’s a tiny fraction of what we need,” Hogan said. “…And so we have very difficult decisions … about the implementation and rollout of that plan.”

Going forward, Marcozzi will become the state’s senior medical adviser on COVID-19.

Marcozzi on Tuesday encouraged Marylanders to stay vigilant in the fight against the novel coronavirus.

“I do understand, we all just want to take one day off from COVID-19. Especially during the holidays. Unfortunately, the virus doesn’t take a day off,” Marcozzi said.

He also encouraged people to continue getting regular medical care to avoid exacerbating other medical conditions.

“Many providers have the ability to see you either by phone through a telemedicine application or in their office safely,” Marcozzi said. “We all need to stay physically ― and mentally ― healthy, particularly during this holiday season.”

By Danielle E. Gaines

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: COVID-19, Maryland News Tagged With: capacity, coronavirus, Covid-19, Health, Hogan, hospitals, neall, surge, surge beds

As Md. Moves Into Its Second COVID-19 Surge, Hogan Lays Out A Slew Of Emergency Actions

November 18, 2020 by Maryland Matters

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Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) issued a series of COVID-19 restrictions Tuesday afternoon, following the state’s quick entry into the pandemic’s second surge.

“This virus has been with us for so long that too many of us have become numb to the staggering, spiking numbers that are being announced every day,” Hogan said at a Tuesday news conference. “It does not matter how well we have done for all these months. If we falter now and if we fail to take this seriously, we will look just like all those other states and this deadly virus will strengthen its grip on our state and our nation.”

Effective 5 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 20, every establishment that serves food and alcohol, including bars and restaurants, will be unable to perform indoor dining services from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.

Bars must continue to prohibit standing and crowding. Restaurant and bar patrons are still required to stand six feet apart, and no more than six people may be seated together at a table.

Carryout food and alcoholic beverage services are still permitted.

“This order carries the full force of the law and it will be enforced,” Hogan asserted.

Also effective Friday at 5 p.m., all retail businesses, religious institutions, bingo halls, bowling alleys, roller and ice skating rinks, fitness centers, pool halls and social clubs will only be allowed to function at 50% capacity. Masks, sanitization and distancing guidelines are to be enforced.

Additionally, sports fans will no longer be allowed to sit in the stands at racetracks or collegiate and professional stadiums.

Hogan stressed that the state’s mask mandate remains “in full force and effect” at all public indoor facilities including grocery stores, pharmacies, gyms, retail establishments, in public places of public and private businesses and on public transportation.

“This very simple step of wearing masks continues to be the single best mitigation strategy that we have to fight the virus,” he said. “This is not a political issue ― it’s not a limitation on your right to infect other people ― but it is the best way to keep you and your family members safe, to keep people out of the hospital and to save lives.”

‘We are in a war right now’

“The sad reality is that all across America, more people are getting infected with COVID-19,” said Hogan.

And Maryland is no exception.

According to the governor, the state has consistently seen over 1,000 newly confirmed cases in the last 13 days, with this past Saturday documenting the most confirmed cases ever seen in one day. Maryland’s seven-day positivity rate has shot up to 6.85% ― well over a 5% warning threshold ― and 20 of the state’s 24 jurisdictions have followed that trend.

Hospitalizations are on the rise, too.

Tuesday, the state saw 1,046 people hospitalized for the virus, 255 of which are in the ICU. That is the highest hospitalization rate since June 7.

Nearly 20 hospitals across the state have reached over 90% capacity. Hospitals in western Maryland have already reached their full capacity.

“Even with the additional 6,000 beds that we provided for in our hospital surge plan, Maryland hospitals are now reaching capacity,” the governor said. “All of this requires additional, immediate actions to prevent the over-burdening of our healthcare system and to stop more Marylanders from dying.”

To protect healthcare workers and slow the spread, the Maryland Department of Health issued an emergency order Tuesday barring hospital visitors except for the parents or guardians of minors, those in compassionate care, obstetric services and supporters of people with disabilities. The agency has also advised hospitals to avoid performing non-urgent or elective surgeries if possible.

Additionally, the Department of Health has issued an order allowing hospitals nearing or at their full capacity to transfer patients to hospitals with vacancies and appropriate resources.

Dr. Tom Scalea, physician and chief of shock trauma at the University of Maryland Medical Center, said at the Tuesday news conference that hospitals who needed to go “critical care bed shopping” generally looked inward at their own hospital systems for help, “ignoring available beds that maybe exist actually relatively close to them.”

“Now a single phone call will give them access to the appropriate level of critical care services,” he explained. “This is, of course, based on a principle that everybody’s going to cooperate [and] play ball.”

“I’m sure that will be the case.”

In an effort to protect more vulnerable populations, Hogan has restricted visitation to nursing homes. Indoor visits will now only be allowed for compassionate care patients, and all visitors must provide documentation of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of their visit.

“I realize this is very difficult, especially at this time of year,” Hogan explained, “but please know that by refraining from visits at this time, you are helping keep them safe and to save the lives of our most vulnerable.”

Additionally, the Department of Health will begin to require nursing home staff to be tested twice a week. Residents will be tested once a week.

Pensively, Hogan recalled a press conference early on in the pandemic when he announced the state’s first COVID-19 related death.

“I’ll never forget back on March 19, when it was my sad duty to report the very first coronavirus death in our state,” he remembered.

Now Maryland reports 4,186 deaths ― 26 of which occurred on Monday, alone.

“That’s more than one [person] dying every hour in Maryland,” said the governor, adding that more Marylanders have died of COVID-19 this year than one year’s worth of people lost to “car accidents, gun violence and the flu combined.”

Hogan addressed members of the public who may choose not to believe reports from news outlets or the Department of Health about the gravity of the pandemic.

“Regardless of all the disinformation that’s being spread all over social media, this is not the flu,” he said. “It’s not fake news. It’s not going to magically disappear just because we’re all tired of it and we want our normal lives back.”

“We are in a war right now, and the virus is winning.”

By Hannah Gaskill

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: COVID-19, Maryland News Tagged With: bars, capacity, coronavirus, Covid-19, Hogan, indoor dining, masks, restaurants, restrictions, social distancing

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