
GTA hospitals call ‘code orange’ to help address Omicron-fuelled COVID-19 surge
Global News
The network overseeing Brampton Civic Hospital and Etobicoke General Hospital said the move was being done to address surging COVID-19 patients and staff shortages.
Two hospitals in the Greater Toronto Area are moving to a “code orange” to address an increase in COVID-19 patients and staffing shortages, which is pushing capacity to its breaking point.
The William Osler Health System, which oversees operations at both Brampton Civic Hospital and Etobicoke General Hospital, said late Monday that the rare move was made “to ensure internal and external resources are deployed efficiently.”
“This move will enable us to continue to provide high-quality care to our patients, and we are grateful to our staff, physicians and volunteers who have moved swiftly to enact our Code Orange policy and procedures,” the health system’s president and CEO Dr. Naveed Mohammad said in a statement.
The hospital network said the temporary measure will see staff redeployed and some patients transferred to neighbouring hospitals to help free up capacity.
Ontario is facing its worst surge of COVID-19 cases yet, fuelled by the highly transmissible Omicron variant. The past two weeks has seen daily case counts explode beyond 10,000, with the vast majority in the Toronto and Peel regions.
As of Monday, 1,232 people were hospitalized with the disease, including 210 in intensive care, a level not seen since last May amid the province’s third wave.
The William Osler Health System noted its hospitals have been among the hardest-hit during the pandemic.