The Tufts Daily - Monday, February 7, 2022

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXXIII, ISSUE 8

tuftsdaily.com

Monday, February 7, 2022

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Tufts Children’s Hospital closes to increase space for adult patients, faces community backlash by Liz Shelbred Staff Writer

Tufts Children’s Hospital announced at a Jan. 20 press conference that it would convert its 41 pediatric inpatient beds to adult ICU medical and surgery beds in hopes of increasing adult critical care by 20%. Wellforce, the hospital’s parent company, reached an agreement to transfer pediatric patients in need of inpatient care to Boston Children’s Hospital. Level three neonatal intensive care services will continue to be offered at Tufts Medical Center, while general inpatient pediatric care and level two special care will be offered at Lowell General Hospital. Pending regulatory approval from state health officials, this change will take effect on July 1, 2022. The decision to close Tufts Children’s Hospital — formerly and familiarly known as the Floating Hospital for Children — was created in response to an observed shift in the health care needs of the community. According to Tufts Medical Center, the number of adult patients

requiring specialized care has increased, while fewer pediatric patients are requiring hospitalizations. At the same time, children who do require inpatient care are in need of more complex services and resources that may be unavailable at smaller pediatric hospitals such as Tufts. Jeremy Lechan, media relations manager of Tufts Medical Center, told the Daily that the hospital has been following this trend for years. “Our adult beds at Tufts Medical Center are full and they have been for a long time,” Lechan said. “This is not just a pandemic phenomenon.” According to Lechan, with adult beds in high demand, the medical center is often forced to turn away hundreds of critically ill adults every month. At times, the center’s pediatric beds were half empty, although the delta surge in COVID-19 cases increased the number of occupied beds in recent months. “Our analytics show that likely once the surge is passed and the pandemic is over, [pediatric bed capacity] is going to return to that level,” Lechan said.

According to Lechan, Tufts Medical Center announced its decision now to give five months to iron out all of the details. What’s next for employees and patients Many pediatric patients, hundreds of employees and physicians and tens of Tufts University Medical School students and residents will be impacted by this change. Physicians, nurses and other TCH employees are likely to lose their jobs. Tufts Medical Center and Wellforce have committed to assisting affected TCH employees and physicians with their transition, according to Lechan. “Our HR departments in all of our organizations are committed to working with each affected employee to try to make sure that they have a job waiting for them and that [the] transition is smooth and seamless,” Lechan said. TMC further assured that child patients and their families would continue to receive care from TCH. Though aforementioned bed capacity patterns have existed for years and Tufts’ decision has been in the works for months,

KATRINA AQUILINO / THE TUFTS DAILY

The Tufts Medical Center is pictured in downtown Boston on Feb. 5. many community members were shocked by the announcement. “To me, it was like an unfair, blindsided attack,” Tim O’Connell, founder of Tommy’s Place — a vacation home for kids fighting cancer — and creator of a petition to save the hospital, said. Community backlash Community members share a number of concerns about the transition, such as continuity of care for pediatric patients, especially for those with complex, critical conditions.

For Tara Forrest, mother of TCH patient Alexa Pantoja, maintaining the same quality and consistency of care through this transition is a major concern. After spending months with Pantoja during her treatment of acute myeloid leukemia, Pantoja’s care team got to know her very well, from her favorite school subjects to her reactions to medications. “[Her care team] knew absolutely everything that she had see HOSPITAL, page 2

Study abroad programs operating despite COVID-19 concerns by Zoe Kava

Deputy News Editor

With the global surge of COVID-19 cases over the past few months, both Tufts and non-Tufts study abroad programs have had to make adjustments to the structure of their programs. Individual students also had to reevaluate their study abroad plans for the spring semester. Tufts is currently running spring semester programs in Madrid, Paris, London, Tübingen and Santiago, among other cities. Tufts Global

Education made the decision to suspend Tufts programs in Hong Kong, Beijing and Japan due to local government restrictions on international guests, visa concerns, and extensive quarantine protocols. Since the beginning of the pandemic, Tufts Global Education has been eager to allow students to return to education abroad. Mala Ghosh, associate dean and senior director of Tufts Global Education, spoke about the preparations that Tufts Global Education has been doing to ensure the study abroad programs operate as planned.

COURTESY MICHEAL BARONE

Trinity College Dublin is pictured.

“Our international team has been preparing for hosting students during the pandemic since it began during the winter of 2020,” Ghosh wrote in an email to the Daily. “We have been in constant communication with one another, our partners abroad, stakeholders across Tufts University, and at the same time, closely monitoring local government and health official advisories on a daily basis since January 2020.” Jeanne Fourneyron, director of Tufts-in-Paris, said there has been no shortage of student enrollment in the program. “Student enrollment in Paris is back to pre-covid numbers which shows the strong demand for study abroad,” Fourneyron wrote in an email to the Daily. Loreto Pomar, director of Tuftsin-Chile, is also optimistic about the spring semester for students participating in the Tufts-in-Chile program. “Even though we face uncertain times with an ongoing pandemic, we will confront new challenges and achieve our goals for the semester with amazing experiences,” Pomar wrote in an email to the Daily. Dr. Meredith Hyde, director of Tufts-in-London and Tuftsin-Oxford, said that few students

dropped out of the program last minute due to COVID-19 concerns. “We told students from the outset that only they would know how well they managed uncertainty, and that because of the times we live in and the constraints they impose study abroad wouldn’t be for everyone, and we very much respect that,” Hyde wrote in an email to the Daily. “We were surprised how few withdrew over the holidays.” Melanie Armstrong, associate director of programs and outreach, added that there was not an outstanding number of withdrawals from study abroad programs. “As is typical in any semester (even pre-COVID), we saw a few withdrawals from Tufts Programs Abroad in the months leading up to the start of programs, but really only a handful in the immediate weeks prior,” Armstrong wrote in an email to the Daily. While the directors of the university’s study abroad programs made it clear that the experience would be different than what it was in semesters prior to COVID19, students still felt nervous about how the programs would operate. Annika Solomone, who is studying abroad through Tufts-in-Paris, said that she felt a lot of uncertainty in the days prior to her departure.

FEATURES / page 3

ARTS / page 4

SPORTS / back

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“The most stressful part of the months leading up to my flight was definitely the uncertainty; they told us we wouldn’t know for sure whether or not the program would get cancelled until the day of our flights, so I couldn’t help but feel anxious while packing up my entire off-campus room,” Solomone, a junior wrote in an email to the Daily. Solomone said she believes that students dropped out of the study abroad programs that did not look as if they would operate smoothly due to the COVID-19 pandemic. “I think people dropped out of programs that didn’t look as hopeful as [Tufts-in-Paris]; I know there’s a program in England that has fully online classes, which makes going at all less worth it for many,” Solomone wrote. While not much has changed for the Tufts-in-Paris program, as classes and excursions remain in person, the living options for students have changed. Students now have the option to stay in a dorm as opposed to living with a host family. “[Tufts-in-Paris] gave us the unique option to stay in a student dorm this year,” Solomone see ABROAD, page 2 NEWS

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