Army Spc. Joseph Sakyi, a medical maintainer and native of Bronx, New York, assigned to Company A, 47th Combat Support Hospital, checks medical equipment for functionality at the CenturyLink Field Event Center in downtown Seattle, Wash., March 30. The site is undergoing a major transformation from a sports arena to a world-class Army hospital to help free up bed space for COVID-19 patients.

WASHINGTON – Army medical professionals began treating patients at the Javits Convention Center in New York City Tuesday and an Army hospital unit deployed to Seattle will begin receiving patients Friday.

The 627th Hospital Center from Fort Carson, Colorado, has set up 250 beds at CenturyLink Field Event Center in Seattle, next to the home of Seahawks football. The hospital unit has also established two emergency rooms, two operating rooms, a pharmacy and x-ray department there.

It’s one of the most capable hospitals in the Army, said Lt. Gen. Laura J. Richardson, commander of U.S. Army North, headquartered in San Antonio, Texas. She spoke by teleconference at a Pentagon press conference Wednesday afternoon.

ARNORTH has now been designated as the Joint Force Land Component Command to control all military ground forces supporting the COVID-19 response effort, she explained.

About 3,600 Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines are now deployed to New York and Washington state to support the Federal Emergency Management Agency and local officials, she said.

In total, about 5,600 military under U.S. Northern Command are “laser-focused” to support the COVID-19 response, said Gen. Terrence J. O’Shaughnessy, NORTHCOM commander. He said more troops are prepared to deploy when needed.

“We’re approaching it as a large-scale military campaign,” he said, later adding “the scope of our response is unprecedented.”

Three staging areas for equipment have been set up, he said, one at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington, another at Travis Air Force Base, California, and a third at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware.

Army Spc. Daniel Fields, assigned to the 9th Hospital Center, takes a patient’s blood pressure reading in the Javits New York Medical Station. Soldiers, along with Department of Health and Human Services personnel and other federal, state and local agencies began operating a field hospital out of Javits Center, March 30, 2020, to care for non-COVID-19 patients in an effort to relieve the burden on local hospitals.

In the New York area, the 531st Hospital Center from Fort Campbell, Kentucky, and the 9th Hospital Center from Fort Hood, Texas, first deployed to Lakehurst, New Jersey. From there, the medical personnel are now staffing 750 of the 1,000 beds in the Javits Center, Richardson said.

Currently, non-COVID-19 “lower-acuity” patients are being treated at the Javits Center to take the pressure off other New York hospitals, she said. However, officials are talking about raising the capability of the medical station to treat higher-acuity patients, she added.

“We are working non-stop day and night,” she said.

The U.S. Navy hospital ship Comfort also arrived in New York City Monday and the hospital ship Mercy is in Los Angeles.

“We’re sending our teams into the hottest spots in America,” O’ Shaughnessy said. “We’re taking a very aggressive posture” to practice protective measures so that the military remains healthy to support the nation, he said.

Rows of beds and medical equipment line the floor in the CenturyLink Field Event Center in downtown Seattle, Wash., March 30, 2020. The site is undergoing a major transformation from a sports arena to a world-class Army hospital.

Army North is working with FEMA to determine what military capabilities might be needed around the entire country, Richardson said.

“Our military usually deploys around the world,” she said, “and now we’re serving right here in the homeland.”

If more military hospital units are needed, O’Shaughnessy said Reserve forces may be called upon, or a composite unit may be built for the mission.

Northern Command is attempting to mobilize the reserve components “smartly,” he said, and not call up medical personnel who are already working in hard-pressed hospitals.

Richardson added that means not mobilizing National Guard and Reserve professionals “who might be needed right there in their own community.”

Related links

U.S. Army Guidance on Coronavirus

Army.mil: Worldwide News

Army.mil: National Guard News