BayCare to Pause Some Non-Urgent Surgeries in Hillsborough and Polk Counties

July 13, 2020
Surgeons in an operating room

 

Plan Will Increase Bed Capacity for COVID-19 Patients

CLEARWATER, Fla. (July 13, 2020) – BayCare Health System announced Monday it will begin reducing the number of non-urgent surgeries performed at its hospitals in Hillsborough and Polk counties due to the rising number of severely-ill COVID-19 patients.

The temporary change in policy is effective Thursday, July 16, at 5 p.m., and impacts all six of BayCare’s Hillsborough hospitals: St. Joseph’s, St. Joseph’s Children’s, St. Joseph’s Women’s in Tampa; St. Joseph’s-North in Lutz; St. Joseph’s-South in Riverview; and South Florida Baptist in Plant City. It also applies to BayCare’s three hospitals in Polk County: Winter Haven, Winter Haven Women’s and Bartow Regional Medical Center

“We don’t make the decision lightly as we know it will impact many of our patients who would prefer to have a non-urgent surgery sooner than later, said Tommy Inzina, CEO of BayCare Health System. “But this is about serving the public health and making sure our communities have the maximum resources to address the second peak of this pandemic.”

Under the plan, all surgeries for life-threatening situations will continue to be performed. And unlike the state-mandated ban on elective surgeries earlier this year, BayCare’s effort will still allow many non-urgent surgeries and procedures to continue. Generally, surgeries that could be deferred are those that are not medically urgent and require overnight recovery in the hospital.

BayCare’s Ambulatory Surgery Centers, which specialize in outpatient surgery and were closed under the earlier government ban on electives, will continue to operate.

In the past month, Hillsborough, Pinellas, Polk and Pasco counties have seen available hospital bed capacity decline significantly due to rising COVID-19 cases. Already, BayCare had implemented the same temporary change in surgical scheduling at its Pinellas County hospitals on July 11 and at Morton Plant North Bay Hospital in Pasco County starting today (July 13).

BayCare developed its plan in concert with HCA HealthCare, one of the region’s other major health care systems. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems across West Central Florida have been voluntarily working together to identify the best way to meet the needs of the communities they serve.

About BayCare Health System

BayCare is a leading not-for-profit health care system that connects individuals and families to a wide range of services at 15 hospitals and hundreds of other convenient locations throughout the Tampa Bay and central Florida regions. Inpatient and outpatient services include acute care, primary care, imaging, laboratory, behavioral health, home care, and wellness. Our mission is to improve the health of all we serve through community-owned, health care services that set the standard for high-quality, compassionate care. For more information, visit www.BayCare.org.