
CONCORD, NH โ The state has received confirmation from FEMA that it will receive three monoclonal antibody teams at the beginning of the new year.
On Jan. 3, 2022, FEMA is deploying three teams dedicated to administering monoclonal antibodies to three hospitals in New Hampshire: Elliotย Hospital, Alice Peck Day Memorialย Hospital, and Concord Hospital, according to a news release from Gov. Chris Sununu.
โPatients are referred for treatment with monoclonal antibodies at infusion sites by their primary care provider and are accessible at some urgent care centers,โ said Dr. Jonathan Ballard, Chief Medical Officer at DHHS. โThis assistance will reduce the number of patients needing hospitalization.โ
A map of locations administering monoclonal antibodies in New Hampshire is on theย NH COVID-19 Treatment Resources website.
Health and Human Services spokesman Laura Montenegro said: โPatients with increased risk of severe disease that may result in hospitalization or death have medical indications to receive monoclonal antibodies.ย Primary care providers make these determinations using their clinical judgment and the use of the NIH Treatment guidelines available here.”
Vanessa Stafford, vice president of communications at New Hampshire Hospital Associationโs Foundation for Healthy Communities said: โHaving additional federal resources has been, and will continue to be, important to our hospitalsโ ability to respond the COVID-19 surge New Hampshire is experiencing.
โThe establishment of three dedicated monoclonal antibody treatment sites will not only expand access to these important COVID-19 treatments, it will also free up our hospitalsโ health care workers to support patients that are extremely ill within their facilities.โ
Sununu issued the following statement after the Office of Professional Licensure and Certification confirmed that the State licensed over 650 nurses in a three-week period following hisย Executive Order 2021-12, regarding โall actions completed in order to increase licensed health care workforce and hospital capacity.โ
โThe Office of Professional Licensing looks forward to continuing its collaboration with the Board of Nursing to identify ways to eliminate unnecessary licensure requirements, increase portability of nurses licensed in other states, and to expedite the licensing timeframes overall,โ said OPLC Executive Director Lindsey Courtney.