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Are COVID hospitalizations high where you live? Look up your hospital

COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to strain U.S. hospitals in certain places, while the burden is easing up in other areas. Look up your local hospital to see how it's faring.

The federal government on Monday released detailed hospital-level data showing the toll COVID-19 is taking on health care facilities, including how many inpatient and ICU beds are available on a weekly basis.

Using an analysis from the University of Minnesota's COVID-19 Hospitalization Tracking Project, NPR has created a tool that allows you to see how your local hospital and your county overall are faring.

It focuses on one important metric — how many beds are filled with COVID-19 patients — and shows this for each hospital and on average for each county.

The ratio of COVID-19 hospitalizations to total beds gives a picture of how much strain a hospital is under. Though there's not a clear threshold, it's concerning when that rate rises above 10%, hospital capacity experts told NPR.

Anything above 20% represents "extreme stress" for the hospital, according to a framework developed by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington.

If that figure gets to near 50% or above, the stress on staff is immense. "It means the hospital is overloaded. It means other services in that hospital are being delayed. The hospital becomes a nightmare," IHME's Ali Mokdad told NPR.

The University of Minnesota's analysis shows that there are 55 counties where the hospital average has reached that rate.

Use the look-up tool below the map to find details about hospitals in your county.

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Thomas Wilburn contributed to this report.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corrected: February 4, 2022 at 11:00 PM CST
A previous version of this story incorrectly said hospitals are struggling because of a surge of the delta variant. It is the omicron variant that is currently surging.
Sean McMinn is a data editor on NPR's Investigations team.
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