No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsCosta RicaNews briefs: Costa Rica increases ICU capacity, changes COVID alerts

News briefs: Costa Rica increases ICU capacity, changes COVID alerts

The coronavirus crisis has transformed life in Costa Rica, which has enacted measures to protect the capacity of its health system.

Here’s what you should know today.

Two cantons leave Orange Alert

Two cantons improved from Orange to Yellow Alerts this week, the National Emergency Commission (CNE) announced Wednesday.

Montes de Oca (San José province) and Parrita (Puntarenas) are now under the less-restrictive alert level. The change took effect starting Thursday, August 20.

CNE this week did not place any new cantons under an Orange Alert.

List of Costa Rica Orange Alert cantons on August 20, 2020
via CNE.

Click here for a breakdown of what’s open (and what’s not) in Yellow and Orange Alert areas this week.

Click here for an interactive map of Orange/Yellow Alert cantons in Costa Rica.

Costa Rica again expands ICU capacity

Costa Rica again expanded its intensive-care capacity at public hospitals, announced Mario Ruíz, the medical manager for the Costa Rican Social Security System (CCSS).

The changes will allocate 1,058 total intermediate-care beds and 287 intensive-care beds for COVID-19 patients at public hospitals across Costa Rica.

Hospital capacity “has been an ongoing worry” throughout the pandemic, Ruíz said, and in March Costa Rica had just 24 ICU beds designated for coronavirus patients.

Since then, the CCSS has created a coronavirus-specific hospital (CEACO), opened a new tower at Calderón Guardia Hospital, and is now converting space at the National Psychiatric Hospital.

Wednesday, 126 patients with COVID-19 were in the ICU, representing 44% of Costa Rica’s maximum capacity at public hospitals. Two-hundred eighty-six people occupy intermediate-care beds, representing 27% of maximum capacity.

Costa Rica coronavirus hospitalizations and deaths on August 19, 2020
Tico Times graph.

For context, Costa Rica recorded 23 deaths attributed to respiratory viruses in all of 2018, according to Health Ministry data.

 

Trending Now

Dutch Report Highlights Costa Rica’s Drug Transit Role and Violence Spike

Dutch media has spotlighted Costa Rica's growing role in the global cocaine trade, pointing to increased shipments to Europe and a sharp rise in...

San José’s Best Neighborhoods For Travelers Per Lonely Planet

Our capital draws attention in a new Lonely Planet guide that points visitors toward its key districts. Writer Sarah Gilbert portrays the city, called...

Spine-Tingling Costa Rican Folklore Tales

Some of these legends pack a frightening punch; other tales are downright wacky (i.e. el Macho Chingo).

Day of the Dead in Mexico has Ofrendas, Catrinas, and Tradition

Flowers, skulls, skeletons, intimate moments, and memories: Day of the Dead in Mexico stirs emotions for those who are gone but is also a...

How to Avoid Bad Coffee Shops While Traveling in Costa Rica

As we all probably know by now, Costa Rica produces some of the world's best coffee, with its high-altitude farms yielding beans known for...

Migrant nurses and physicians now critical to OECD health systems

Foreign-born doctors and nurses are becoming increasingly numerous in the health systems of developed countries, highlighted a report published Monday by the Organization for...
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica