Here's something from an un-named source:

Be prepared to see a major movement in the Healthcare setting towards
complete case diversion ( the practice of sending patients out and away
from the hospitals they present to). This is currently used when big
traumas, burns, stroke or cardiac patients need higher level care than a
hospital can provide. This practice may segway into further development
of Large ward Cohorting or EBola Centers( REgional FEMA Health? Camps)
Ironically they would be the unhealthiest if not deadliest place to be.
I was working in the ICU today and overheard the following information in
the company of several leaders in the hospital including, Critical care ICU
Managers, Infectious Disease Manager, Multiple Intensivists (ICU Md's) and
critical care coordinators. They have not been receiving complete or
definitive answers from the CDC for and specificity of Level of PPE and so
are clueless and semi-paralyzed as to what to do.

From the conversation:

On the record, The higher level system administrators for the Multi-
hospital system are working desperately to find any way to generate an
agreement and policy to Divert any and all discovered or potential Ebola
cases to higher level hospitals with greater resources "for the betterment
of the patient outcome". Off the record it was said they are just trying to
keep those cases out because they have absolutely no capability to handle
or contain Ebola and don't want to end up with the same reputation as
Presbyterian hospital when its discovered by the community they are utterly
unprepared.

Second, t
he hospital leadership is fully aware of the attrition of nurses and staff
as no shows if Ebola came to town. The nurses that are awake will leave to
ride it out, the ones who believe the media mantra will stay long enough to
get ill from the "recommended PPE" and become statistics. While still
others will leave but be forced toreturn to work because they have no
finances for longer leave of absence due to already hard times and family
needs or fears of getting fired or threatened their licenses will be
revoked.

In summation of the conversation further. Consolidation and mass cohorting
on a ward would be the only way to house any and all cases with over-worked
skeleton crews and no resources. The consensus was "the public was better
off staying home" and dying there "instead of spreading it" through the
hospital system, because "we couldn't do anything for them anyways".