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COVID-19 in Maryland Health Care

Survey: Maryland Scores No. 6 on Health Care During the Pandemic

A nurse treats a patient with coronavirus in a hospital in Leonardtown on May 1, 2020. Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images.

This story is reprinted from Stateline, an initiative of The Pew Charitable Trusts.

The health systems in Hawaii and Maine have performed best of all the states during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new rankings that weighed such factors as vaccination rates, capacity in hospital and intensive care units, and death rates.

Alabama ranked at the bottom in the scorecard, followed by Oklahoma, Kentucky, Mississippi and Georgia.

Maryland clocked in at No. 6.

The rankings, released last week, were compiled by the Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation that promotes health equity and higher health care quality, efficiency and access. Every year, Commonwealth uses dozens of measures to produce a ranking of state health care systems. This year, it added categories specific to how state health care systems performed during COVID-19 from February 2020 to the end of March 2022. Vermont, Washington and Oregon rounded out the top five.

Generally, the states judged to have overall stronger health systems also ranked well in their COVID-19 performance. The reverse was true of those scoring poorly in their overall health care rankings.

How quickly states got shots into arms after vaccines first became available at the end of 2020 was one of the measures Commonwealth used in assessing the state COVID-19 response.

Vermont moved the fastest, followed by Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maine. They were able to fully vaccinate (meaning, typically, two doses) 70% of the population ages 12 and older within 200 days from when the vaccines became available.

By contrast, 21 states still had not reached 70% by the end of March 2022. Alabama, Mississippi and Wyoming had failed to reach even 60%.

Although the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended boosters, fewer than 40% of adults in the United States had gotten one by the end of March, with the rates varying considerably across the states.

More than half of adults got boosters in Maine, Rhode Island and Vermont. By contrast, not even a quarter of adults in Alabama, Mississippi and North Carolina had received a booster shot.

Another measure Commonwealth analysts looked at was how stressed hospital systems became during the pandemic. The report noted that between August 2020 and March 2022, the nation experienced 4.6 million COVID-19-related hospitalizations. To determine how pressed health systems were, analysts measured the number of days during that time in which at least 80% of intensive care unit beds in each state were occupied.

They found that 16 states and the District of Columbia operated ICUs at or above 80% capacity for at least 150 days. Texas and Alabama were at or above that percentage for 566 and 517 days, respectively. Georgia, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Rhode Island each exceeded 300 days at or above 80%.

One other measure Commonwealth used in its rankings was the number of “excess” deaths each state experienced during the pandemic. Excess deaths, the analysis explains, means deaths above the norm, some as a result of COVID-19, but others the consequence of disruptions in access to health care caused by the pandemic.

Generally, the states with stronger overall health systems had fewer excess deaths than states with weaker systems.

The number of excess deaths ranged from a low of 110 per 100,000 people in Hawaii to a high of 596 per 100,000 in Mississippi.

Nationwide, the analysis found, premature deaths from treatable conditions such as heart disease and diabetes rose between 2019 and 2020 from 83.8 to 89.8 deaths per 100,000 residents. The most pronounced increases were in the Midwest and the South.

The good news in the report was that the rate of people with health care insurance remained fairly stable across the states during the pandemic, although it did dip a bit in 2021.

The reasons: Fewer people lost their employer-sponsored health insurance than expected, safety net provisions in the Affordable Care Act helped those who lost their insurance, congressional action early in the pandemic kept people enrolled in Medicaid, and increased subsidies became available during the pandemic to help people pay for private health insurance plans.

Some of those provisions will expire when the national public health emergency is eventually lifted, which could cause a steep decline in numbers of people with health insurance.

State Health Care System Performance on COVID-19

1. Hawaii 26. Ohio
2. Maine 27. Kansas
3. Vermont 28. Michigan
4. Washington 29. Rhode Island
5. Oregon 30. South Dakota
6. Maryland 31. Tennessee
7. Utah 32. North Carolina
8. Massachusetts 33. Indiana
9. Minnesota 34. Montana
10. Connecticut 35. Nevada
11. Virginia 36. Wyoming
12. Illinois 37. New Mexico
13. New Hampshire 38. Arizona
14. Alaska 39. Missouri
15. Nebraska 40. Louisiana
16. New York 41. North Dakota
17. Colorado 42. Arkansas
18. New Jersey 43. Texas
19. California 44. West Virginia
20. Wisconsin 45. South Carolina
21. Iowa 46. Georgia
22. Idaho 47. Mississippi
23. Delaware 48. Kentucky
24. Florida 49. Oklahoma
25. Pennsylvania 50. Alabama

 

Source: The Commonwealth Fund

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Survey: Maryland Scores No. 6 on Health Care During the Pandemic