Lodi News-Sentinel

National Guard, morgue trucks arrive in L.A. amid COVID surge

- By Rong-Gong Lin II, Luke Money and Lila Seidman

LOS ANGELES — The intensity of the pandemic continues to worsen, with the rising COVID-19 death toll overwhelmi­ng funeral homes and causing state officials to send refrigerat­ed trucks across California to hold corpses.

The National Guard has been called to Los Angeles County to help with the temporary storage of bodies at the county medical examiner-coroner’s office, relieving pressure on hospital morgues and private mortuaries that have run out of storage space for bodies.

Deaths from COVID-19 have been spiking both in L.A. County and the rest of California. Earlier this week, L.A. County exceeded 11,000 COVID-19 deaths. Officials warned of dark weeks ahead amid a postChrist­mas surge that is expected to put pressure on already overwhelme­d hospitals.

There have been, on average, 183 deaths reported each day over the last week, and nearly 1,600 deaths have been recorded since Dec. 30.

Many hospital morgues are now filled with bodies, and officials are trying to move them for temporary storage at the county medical examiner-coroner’s office.

Mortuary and funeral home operators say they are having to turn away bereaved families because they don’t have the capacity to handle more bodies.

Officials said last week that the California National Guard was being called in to help county workers as corpses from hospital morgues are moved into storage at the L.A. County Department of the Medical Examiner-Coroner.

Among the hospitals with refrigerat­ed trucks is Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, one of many hospitals where the morgues have been full.

As of last week, guard troops were stationed at 13 medical facilities in the state, including Adventist Health White Memorial in Los Angeles, Methodist Hospital of Southern California in Arcadia and Pacifica Hospital of the Valley in Sun Valley.

Each team consists of six to 10 medical corps members, led by a physician or a nurse. Some facilities, such as El Centro Regional Medical Center in Imperial County, have two teams.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Shiroma, a spokesman with California National Guard, told The Times last week there has been “more of an effort to help the civilian healthcare providers, by providing them additional support through our military.”

L.A. County Supervisor Janice Hahn had requested the return to Southern California of the Navy hospital ship USNS Mercy.

 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? An October photo shows Brian Elias, the L.A. County coroner’s chief of investigat­ions, near donated freezer containers behind his office in Los Angeles. Elias says the containers have easily added to the county’s body storage capacity, from around 500 to nearly 3,000.
JAY L. CLENDENIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES An October photo shows Brian Elias, the L.A. County coroner’s chief of investigat­ions, near donated freezer containers behind his office in Los Angeles. Elias says the containers have easily added to the county’s body storage capacity, from around 500 to nearly 3,000.

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