Wednesday was the slowest day of the week in St. Cloud Hospital's emergency room — only 11 people were in the waiting room at noon while 38 patients filled every available treatment bay.
Minnesota's busiest hospital — by occupancy rate — has been at the epicenter of the state's COVID-19 wave for three months, treating an escalating number of infected patients while seeing no slowdown in everyday emergencies. The pressure culminated last week with Minnesota's announcement that 22 federal emergency health care workers would shore up staffing in St. Cloud or other hospitals in the CentraCare system this week.
"COVID just overwhelms the system," said Dr. Andrew Winter, an ER physician who zips from traumas to infections to mental health crises. "No matter how big you build it, there are still more patients than you can take care of."
Winter's first ER patient Wednesday afternoon was a homeless man experiencing swelling on a leg marked with open sores and spider bites.
"It's hot; does it feel hot to you?" Winter said.
"Yeah, it burns," replied Bobby Stewart, 46.
Winter reviewed the man's medication and health history and told him to be patient.
"We're going to get some lab work, we'll get an ultrasound of this leg, we'll figure this out, OK?"