Community Corner
1 In 6 Morris Co. Hospital Beds Occupied By COVID Patients
Morris County hospitals could reach 100 percent capacity, according to an analysis of federal data.

MORRIS COUNTY, NJ — More than 1 out of every six hospital beds in Morris County is occupied by a patient being treated for the coronavirus, according to the latest data.
Those numbers are highest at Chilton Medical Center where the latest federal data shows capacity at 75 percent and 21 percent of all beds filled with COVID-19 patients.
The federal government released new, hospital-level data on Monday. NPR, using analysis from the University of Minnesota's COVID-19 Hospitalization Tracking Project, built a tool that shows hospital-by-hospital information.
Find out what's happening in Mendham-Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
You can access the NPR tool on their website.
At Morris County hospitals, an average of 17 percent of all patient beds are currently being occupied by COVID-19 patients, according to the data.
Find out what's happening in Mendham-Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
While there is no clear threshold, NPR cites hospital experts saying that anything above 10 percent is concerning and anything above 20 percent represents "extreme stress" for a hospital.
As coronavirus cases have spiked in recent weeks, New Jersey health officials have urged residents to stay home, wear masks and observe social distancing in order to curb the spread of the virus and keep patients out of rapidly filling hospitals.
On Wednesday, Gov. Phil Murphy announced that New Jersey had 3,672 people hospitalized, 3,462 of whom were COVID positive and 210 were awaiting confirmation.
The hospitalization number is well short of New Jersey’s peak of 8,200 during the spring, but Murphy has expressed fear that the state could hit those numbers again if residents don’t do enough to protect themselves.
Also, 489 people were admitted to New Jersey hospitals on Tuesday, and 451 were discharged. Of those, 721 were in intensive care units and 482 of them were on ventilators.
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