San Diego Union-Tribune

Tijuana state hospital ER nurse dies from COVID-19.

42-year-old was the first actively treating patients to die at Hospital General

- BY WENDY FRY wendy.fry@sduniontri­bune.com

An emergency room nurse described by his colleag ues as a “warrior ” on the front lines of the coronaviru­s pandemic has died from the disease, according to state health officials.

Luis Rigoberto García Medina, a nurse at Hospital General in Tijuana, was admitted on Monday to the same emergency ward where he worked. He had symptoms of fever, exhaustion and a dry cough, hospital administra­tors said.

García passed away on Wednesday, according to hospital off icials. He was the f irst medical profession­al actively treating patients at the state hospital to die from the disease.

Medical profession­als working in the federal health provider system have died from COVID-19 in Baja California, including the recent death of an emergency room medic who worked at one of Tijuana’s federally funded public hospitals, health off icials said Thursday.

Colleagues at Hospital General described the 42-year-old García as a leader and a f ierce worker, often putting in extra hours with patients to help them battle the virus.

“He was always a leader to many, caring and totally dedi

cated, both to his family and to his work team,” said his nursing colleague Jorge Cárdenas Hernández. “In addition, he was always very profession­al and attentive for the benef it of our patients. He gave a lot for those who needed him.”

The public hospital has been overwhelme­d by patients during the past weeks, with at least four people dying in the parking lot before receiving care during the

weekend before the Christmas holiday. Currently, hospital occupancy is around 84 percent.

Baja California’s top health off icial said García’s death was painful for himself and medical workers across the state.

“Yes, it does affect our state of mind and morale because losing our medical profession­als hurts. It hurts very much,” said Dr. Alonso Óscar Pérez Rico, the secretary of health. “He was the f irst active

worker at Hospital General to lose the battle (against the disease) ... Those are the ones that hurt the most — precisely because they risk themselves by taking care of patients.”

Nurses placed a memorial outside the hospital with pictures of García, along with candles and f lowers. Several medical personnel on Thursday were wiping away tears as they visited the altar to deliver more bouquets. A candleligh­t vig il had been held for him the night before.

Some of García’s co-workers described him as noble, kind and humble, and a person who always kept a positive attitude.

During the state government’s daily brief ing, streamed on Facebook, Pérez Rico denied local media repor ts that García could not afford the medication he needed to treat the illness.

“His prognosis upon arrival was very unfavorabl­e,” explained the health secretary. “When he began to receive medical attention, he was already in a very diff icult battle.”

Before his death, a Facebook post — supposedly from a colleague — begged the community to deposit money in an account for medicine for the nurse “who gave everything for society” and “never missed a day of work.” Off icials said they were investigat­ing the authentici­ty of the post.

“In reality, almost all of us have been infected at one point or another,” said a nurse outside the hospital who asked not to be identified because she was not authorized to speak to the media.

“The problem is there really is no good treatment or medicine that works for everyone against this disease,” she added.

State health off icials have beg un collecting and verifying data from health workers in order to distribute the COVID-19 vaccine beginning in the next few weeks.

 ?? WENDY FRY U-T ?? A memorial for Luis Rigoberto García Medina is set up outside Hospital General in Tijuana. The 42-year-old emergency room nurse died Dec. 30 from complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s disease.
WENDY FRY U-T A memorial for Luis Rigoberto García Medina is set up outside Hospital General in Tijuana. The 42-year-old emergency room nurse died Dec. 30 from complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s disease.

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