On Friday, hospitals across Massachusetts will be curtailing inpatient elective procedures that can be safely postponed so they can free up those beds and staff for the sudden surge of COVID patients they've been seeing.
“I think that’s very unfortunate for the patients, many of which put off their surgeries during the first surge and still haven’t gotten them done,” said UMass Memorial Health Care President and CEO Dr. Eric Dickson.
But it will be very different from what happened in the spring, Dickson said.
Get top local stories in Boston delivered to you every morning. Sign up for NBC Boston's News Headlines newsletter.
“During the first surge in the springtime, we took the broad action of really shutting everything down, so mammography stopped occurring, endoscopy stopped occurring,” he said.
This measure is much more focused, according to Dr. Katherine Gergen Barnett, vice chair of family medicine at Boston Medical Center.
“We’re now talking about curtailing elective procedures where you have to use an inpatient bed -- in other words, procedures that can be put off and have no impact on your health,” Gergen Barnett said.
She said that, this time around, outpatient procedures like mammograms, colonoscopies, endoscopies and pediatric visits will still continue.
“We know there are downstream consequences of not doing routine health care maintenance,” Gergen Barnett said.
She and Dickson agree that, while hospitals will take a financial hit, this decision by Gov. Charlie Baker makes sense for the short-term.
“He’s doing this because it will free up probably 10-20%, depending on the health care system, of the bed capacity in the hospitals such that there’ll be more room to take care of COVID patients,” Dickson said.
The hope is that this is only for a few months, as more and more people get vaccinated and the need for hospital beds goes down, he said.