Two of the six Bay State hospitals identified yesterday by public health officials as landing spots for possible Ebola cases can accommodate a combined four patients, hospital officials acknowledged yesterday.

Baystate Medical Center, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston Medical Center, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital and Tufts Medical Center have been designated to receive Ebola patients, outgoing Department of Public Health Commissioner Cheryl Bartlett said yesterday.

Doctors at Mass. General are ready to handle “one adult case and one pediatric case,” hospital spokesman Noah Brown said yesterday.

Baystate Medical Center physicians can accommodate “up to two patients,” according to a spokesman.

The Herald reported last month that UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester is prepared for “two or three” Ebola patients, according to hospital President Patrick Muldoon. And though UMass Memorial wasn’t one of the six hospitals Bartlett identified yesterday, she said she is “anticipating that soon they may join this group of six.”

Bartlett said “I can’t really answer that question. I don’t know,” when asked by a Herald reporter last month if she knew how many patients hospitals were prepared for.

“I don’t think they pick a particular number,” she said. “I can’t say, I haven’t been in an actual drill myself.”

Repeated calls to Beth Israel Deaconess, Brigham and Women’s, Tufts and Boston Medical Center were not returned yesterday.