ST. CLOUD — In November, doctors and nurses in military fatigues arrived at St. Cloud Hospital to aid a depleted staff that was exhausted physically and emotionally.
COVID-19 patients were spilling out of the hospital's intensive care unit, and the positivity rate was 18% — astonishingly high at the time. The 23-member strike team sent by the Defense Department, one of two dispatched to Minnesota, was considered a godsend, "desperately needed and a lift in our spirits," said Ken Holmen, chief executive at CentraCare, which runs St. Cloud Hospital.
Fast forward two months and the situation is even more grim for CentraCare, the region's largest health care system. In early January, one in three people tested by CentraCare was positive for COVID-19. More than a quarter of the hospital is filled by COVID patients. And the federal strike team is scheduled to leave next week.
Stearns County last week had the second-highest case increase per capita in the state — shooting from 557 cases per 100,000 people during the first week of January to 1,662 per 100,000 last week.
Meanwhile, CentraCare's increasingly desperate pleas for mask mandates have fallen on deaf ears.
"We are all frustrated, beyond frustrated," said Dr. Kim Tjaden, a family physician with CentraCare who asked St. Cloud-area leaders to implement a temporary mask mandate during a virtual meeting Jan. 7. Among those present: mayors of St. Cloud and Waite Park, as well as county leaders and city council members.
But no mayors would pass a citywide mask mandate, even temporarily. They cited troubles with enforcement or an anticipated lack of support from council members, even as most other major metropolitan areas in Minnesota implemented some form of mandate. Those cities included Minneapolis, St. Paul, Duluth and Rochester.
"The recent statement to our civic officials is a recognition that we can't do it alone," said Dr. George Morris, CentraCare's COVID-19 incident commander.