Health & Fitness
Coronavirus: How Full Are Batavia-Area Hospitals?
There is now public data showing how close your local hospitals are to being at or over capacity.
BATAVIA, IL — Hospitals in the Batavia area are almost at capacity due to the ongoing surge in coronavirus cases in Illinois and around the country. State health officials warn that once all hospital beds are occupied, patients may be turned away.
For weeks, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Illinois health officials have warned residents of the risk of local hospitals becoming overwhelmed as case counts continue to rise, even as vaccine distribution could be just days away.
Find out what's happening in Bataviafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Illinois Health Care Workers ‘Paying The Price’ As Cases Surge
Residents can now look up exactly how full their local hospital is. Based on research and data compiled by the University of Minnesota, National Public Radio created a "look-up" tool showing which hospitals are “dangerously full.”
Find out what's happening in Bataviafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Users can also look up county and statewide hospitalization rates, in addition to info on their local hospital:
- In Kane County, hospitals are 64 percent full
- In Will County, hospitals are 75 percent full
- In DuPage County, hospitals are 74 percent full
- In Grundy County, hospitals are 59 percent full
- In Cook County, hospitals are 70 percent full
- In McHenry County, hospitals are 54 percent full
- In Lake County, hospitals are 65 percent full
Below are local hospital capacity rates and their number of daily COVID-19 patients based on a seven-day average:
- Delnor Community Hospital — 54 percent full, treating an average of 40 COVID-19 patients
- Rush Copley Medical Center — 82 percent full, treating an average of 73 COVID-19 patients
- AMITA Health Mercy Medical Center — 62 percent full, treating an average of 51 COVID-19 patients
You can find more information on the NPR website.
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