The Ohio National Guard has once again been called into an unconventional battle against COVID-19.
Ohio Gov. mike-dewine” target=”_blank”>Mike DeWine< to aid state hospitals suffering from staff shortages related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
“Governor DeWine mobilized 1,050 members of the Ohio National Guard to help relieve the hospital staffing strain caused by the rising number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients,” the governor stated.
FILE – In this Nov. 18, 2020 file photo, Republican Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine discusses the most recent data on Ohio’s soaring coronavirus cases during a news briefing at John Glenn International Airport on in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Andrew Welsh-Huggins, File)
OHIO HOSPITALS ‘PAUSE’ BIDEN VACCINE MANDATE AS COVID PATIENTS STRAIN ICUs
The governor wrote Friday that 150 of the dispatched guard members are medical professionals who will assist directly at hospitals and testing sites.
Approximately 900 of the mobilized troops are largely intended to assist logistical shortages such as transporting patients and helping to distribute meals.
FILE – In this Thursday, April 8, 2021, file photo, Kent State University student Regan Raeth, of Hudson, Ohio, looks at her vaccination bandage as she waits for 15 minutes after her shot in Kent, Ohio. On Wednesday, May 12, 2021. (AP Photo/Phil Long, File)
“Earlier in the pandemic, our concern was about beds, about space,” DeWine said during a Friday press conference. “Today, it is about personnel.”
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us-regions hospitals are “pausing” the infectious-disease mandate for health care workers as the hospitalization rate for COVID-19 patients statewide drastically soars – though most facilities there still support the Biden administration’s federal mandate, which is headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
OhioHealth – a system of 12 hospitals across the state of Ohio – rejected that the pause of the mandate for its employees was due solely to staffing shortages, as spokesman Colin Yoder told Fox News Digital that its “more do to the things going through the legislature and the courts right now.”
Fox News’ Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.