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30-bed emergency field hospital being built for COVID-19 care support in western N C

Samaritan’s Purse starts building field hospital in Lenoir to help with COVID-19 Emergency field hospital being built in Lenoir By WBTV Web Staff | December 31, 2020 at 3:40 PM EST - Updated January 1 at 6:28 PM LENOIR, N.C. (WBTV) - A 30-bed emergency field hospital is being built to provide COVID-19 care support for western North Carolina as the pandemic has worsened this winter. Samaritan’s Purse officials said they would begin the construction of the hospital on the grounds of Caldwell UNC Health Care in Lenoir on Friday, Jan. 1. Just after 9:30 a.m., the trucks began to arrive at the site.

COVID-19 Field Hospital To Be Constructed At Caldwell UNC Healthcare In Lenoir

COVID-19 Field Hospital To Be Constructed At Caldwell UNC Healthcare In Lenoir COVID-19 Field Hospital To Be Constructed At Caldwell UNC Healthcare In Lenoir December 31, 2020 Samaritan’s Purse will begin the construction of a 30-bed, emergency field hospital on the grounds of Caldwell UNC Health Care in Lenoir, Friday (January 1). The unit will provide regional COVID-19 care support, assisting five health systems in western North Carolina. Those systems are Caldwell UNC Health Care, Appalachian Regional Health Care in Boone, Catawba Valley Health System in Hickory, Carolinas Healthcare System Blue Ridge in Morganton, and Frye Regional Medical Center in Hickory. The Caldwell UNC site was chose for the field hospital due to its central location and ability to provide support services. Patients receiving treatment at the field hospital will be limited to those who are COVID-positive but do not need the support of a ventilator.

Hospital employees are getting vaccinated, when will you?

Michael McDonald sat in a gray chair dressed in purple scrubs, a gray T-shirt, a blue medical hairnet and a blue medical mask on Tuesday. The room at Catawba Valley Medical Center was silent. Anna Seagle, a registered pharmacist, prepared a needle, then pulled a dose of the COVID-19 vaccine from a bottle into the syringe as McDonald watched. He rolled up his sleeve. She wiped his arm, then stuck the needle in. The room erupted in applause and cheers. It was the first dose of the coronavirus vaccine administered in Catawba County. The day was exciting for medical professionals who have been battling the COVID-19 pandemic for months, said Dr. Phil Greene, chief of staff at Catawba Valley Medical Center.

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