Giving Compass' Take:
- In a video at Rand, Mahshid Abir reflects on her frontline experiences with limited critical care capacity and offers tools to make it more abundant.
- What have we learned from COVID-19 about critical care capacity and preparedness? How are you working to educate yourself and others on equitable health care solutions during the pandemic?
- Read about how unvaccinated individuals are filling up hospital rooms, exposing holes in critical care capacity.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Mahshid Abir, Senior Physician Policy Researcher:
Based on my work as a frontline emergency physician over a decade now, I knew that critical care at baseline was a resource that was scarce across the United States and that in the setting of the pandemic that that scarcity could impact outcomes for patients and whether they survive or not.
The project identifies the evidence base for strategies to increase critical care capacity in hospitals across the U.S. in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and developing a tool to allow hospitals to predict their bottlenecks in surge in response to critical care needs. Unfortunately, this tool and report not only was relevant when it was released back a few months into the pandemic, but it became relevant time and time again over the past year and a half, as many different epicenters evolved across the United States as the pandemic progressed.
Watch the full video about critical care capacity with Mahshid Abir at Rand.