Oroville Mercury-Register

Hospitals at ‘brink of catastroph­e’; 25K dead

- By Brian Melley and Stefanie Dazio

LOS ANGELES » California surpassed 25,000 coronaviru­s deaths since the start of the pandemic, reporting the grim milestone Thursday as an ongoing surge swamps hospitals and pushes nurses and doctors to the breaking point as they brace for another likely increase after the holidays.

“We’re exhausted and it’s the calm before the storm,” said Jahmaal Willis, an emergency room nurse at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Apple Valley. “It’s like we’re fighting a war, a never- ending war, and we’re running out of ammo. We have to get it together before the next fight.”

Public health officials continued to plead with residents just hours before the start of 2021 not to gather for New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns.

In Los Angeles County, where an average of six people die every hour from COVID-19, the Department of Public Health tweeted out snippets every 10 minutes on lives that have been lost.

“The hair stylist who worked for 20 years to finally open her own shop.”

“A grandmothe­r who loved to sing to her grandchild­ren.”

“The bus driver who put her daughter through college and was beaming with pride.”

The tweets, which included messages to wear a mask, physically distance, stay home and “Slow the spread. Save a life,” came on a day when the county reported a record 290 deaths. That would be a rate of one death every five minutes, though it included a backlog.

Los Angeles County, which has a quarter of the state’s 40 million residents, has had 40% of the deaths in California, the third state to reach the 25,000 death count. New York has had nearly 38,000 deaths, and Texas has had more than 27,000, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Infections are spreading rapidly and California confirmed Wednesday that it found a second reported U.S. case of a mutant variant of the coronaviru­s that appears to be more contagious. It’s not clear where the 20-year- old San Diego man was infected with the variant or if it had led to any wider spread of the disease.

In Los Angeles County, hospitals have been pushed “to the brink of catastroph­e,” said Dr. Christina Ghaly, health services director. “This is simply not sustainabl­e. Not just for our hospitals, for our entire health system.”

Cathy Chidester, director of the county’s Emergency Medical Services Agency, said hospitals are facing problems with oxygen with so many COVID-19 patients needing it because they are struggling to breathe. Older hospitals have infrastruc­ture that is struggling to maintain oxygen pressure, and officials are trying to locate additional oxygen tanks for discharged patients to take home.

Ambulances are being forced to wait in bays before they can transfer patients inside hospitals — and in some cases, doctors are treating patients inside ambulances, she said.

At Providence St. Mary Medical Center, about 60 miles east of Los Angeles, there is a cacophany of alarms that sound when a patient’s heart stops and a constant hiss from the oxygen keeping so many alive, Willis said. The hospital has filled the triage area with beds and expanded it into a parking lot. Three dozen patients were waiting to be admitted.

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