KEY POINTS
  • The rise in community spread of the coronavirus is causing more infections among health-care workers, Dr. Penny Wheeler of Minneapolis-based Allina Health told CNBC.
  • The general public adhering to public health strategies will help minimize risk for doctors and nurses, the chief executive said.
  • "You cannot manufacture a talented and compassionate caregiver," Wheeler said.

The sharp uptick in coronavirus cases across the Midwest is increasing health-care workers' risk of getting infected, jeopardizing staffing levels needed to care for other Covid-19 patients, according to the CEO of a Minnesota hospital system.

Dr. Penny Wheeler, who leads Minneapolis-based Allina Health, told CNBC on Monday that the not-for-profit health network has more personal protective equipment, ventilators and available beds to care for Covid-19 patients than it had during the initial outbreak in the spring. Nurses and doctors, however, are harder to come by, she said.