Coronavirus News: 13 die of COVID-19 at same New York City hospital in 24 hours

WABC logo
Thursday, March 26, 2020
Elmhurst Hospital NYC epicenter for coronavirus crisis
NJ Burkett dives into the "biomedical battlefield" at Elmhurst Hospital

ELMHURST, Queens (WABC) -- Long lines of people formed Thursday morning outside Elmhurst Hospital in Queens where in just 24 hours, officials say 13 patients died of coronavirus. The hospital is now "at the center of this crisis."

Dr. Colleen Smith, an emergency care physician at the hospital, described the area where the COVID-19 patients are being treated as "a parking lot of stretchers." As one emergency care physician told ABC News plainly, "this is ground zero."

ABC News has obtained video from inside the hospital and sources there said they are seeing relatively young and seemingly healthy people hardest hit by this virus.

A nurse takes us inside the 'apocalyptic' Elmhurst Hospital:

A nurse takes us inside Elmhurst Hospital in Queens where in just 24 hours, officials say 13 patients died of coronavirus. The hospital is now "at the center of this crisis."

One nurse who has worked at Elmhurst for over a decade, who previously dealt with multiple disease outbreaks and a hurricane, told ABC News, "I've never seen anything like this." She described the emergency room as "absolute chaos. The facility is overwhelmed." Another doctor said, "We're running out of stretchers. We need chairs."

At one point, the hospital even came close to running out of oxygen, according to one emergency care physician. When asked by ABC News what they needed most, he said, "ventilators, critical care staff, and space" - in that order.

One doctor described the scene inside the emergency room as "apocalyptic" in an article posted by the New York Times.

"Right now, we're seeing double our average census every day," said Dr. Ben McVane. "We're filling up our ICUs. We have several floors now that are devoted only to COVID positive patients. So we're finding ourselves getting close to being overwhelmed by patients. Some of these are very sick patients."

Josh Einiger has the latest details on the coronavirus pandemic at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens where 13 people have died.

According to Smith, the hospital's entire Intensive Care Unit is now fully dedicated to treating COVID-19 patients, along with the cardiac, surgical and medical units all transitioned into the ICU as well.

NYC Health and Hospitals Corporation, which runs public hospitals in New York City, declined to respond to ABC News' questions about Elmhurst, but the organization's president, Mitchell Katz, pointed to the transfer of the 30 patients from Elmhurst to other facilities to "help relieve our hospital at Elmhurst."

Elmhurst has a level one trauma center and is located in one of the most densely populated spots in the city's most populous borough.

It is also the hospital to which Rikers Island inmates are rushed in the event of an emergency at the city's jail complex.

Of the more than 20,000 coronavirus cases in NYC, there are at least 6,000 cases in Queens, the most of any borough.

The mayor tweeted on Thursday that the hospital received 40 more ventilators and added more staff to increase capacity. He pleaded for more federal help as other city hospitals are being overwhelmed with patients.

MORE CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 COVERAGE

Frequently Asked Questions

Where are the testing centers

Free educational resources for parents and children

How you can help victims of coronavirus

Where is COVID-19 now? and other resources

Coronavirus news and live updates in New York

Coronavirus news and live updates in New Jersey

Coronavirus news and live updates in Connecticut

New York City updates

Long Island updates

How coronavirus is leaving ghost towns in its path

Coronavirus prevention: how clean are your hands?

Social distancing: What is it and how does it stop the spread of coronavirus?

Coronavirus closures and cancelations

Coronavirus tips: What Americans need to know

Related Information

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on coronavirus

Copyright © 2024 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.