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FEMA to send physicians, nurses, medics to help Maine with flood of COVID patients

The state reported a record number of hospitalizations and Mainers in critical care this week

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Photo/FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency Facebook

Bangor Daily News

PORTLAND, Maine — A team of Federal Emergency Management Agency health care workers is coming to Maine this weekend amid a rapid rise in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.

It comes a day after Gov. Janet Mills announced that the state would deploy 75 National Guard members to help overburdened hospitals in a non-medical capacity. The state also reported a record number of hospitalizations and Mainers in critical care on Wednesday.

Accepting a request from Gov. Janet Mills’ administration earlier this week, FEMA will bring in 14 physicians, nurses and paramedics to assist staff at Portland’s Maine Medical Center who are caring for patients with COVID-19 and other serious illnesses. A request was also made to aid Lewiston’s Central Maine Medical Center, but that request is still pending, according to the administration.

“With this federal team and our soon-to-be-deployed National Guard members, I am hopeful that we can begin to alleviate the strain on our health care system and ensure critical care for those who need it,” Mill said.

The FEMA team is expected to stay in Portland until Dec. 23.

Maine Medical Center is the state’s largest hospital at 637 beds, while Central Maine Medical Center has been heavily hit by the pandemic in recent months. It and two sister hospitals in Rumford and Bridgton were completely full late last month and it called on Mills to ease her vaccine mandate for health care workers amid wider staffing shortages in October.

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(c)2021 the Bangor Daily News

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