U.S. hospitals are on track for a crisis come 2032 that may lead to hundreds of thousands of additional deaths each year.
This is the warning of a study by researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), who found that hospitals are not only fuller now than they were before the COVID-19 pandemic—but are on track to exceed the critical threshold of 85 percent hospital occupancy within just seven years.
"For general hospital beds that are not ICU-level, many consider a bed shortage to occur at an 85 percent national hospital occupancy, marked by unacceptably long waiting times in emergency departments, medication errors and other in-hospital adverse events," said paper author and UCLA professor of medicine Richard Leuchter in a statement.
"If the U.S. were to sustain a national hospital occupancy of 85 percent or greater, it is likely that we would see tens to hundreds of thousands of excess American deaths each year."