Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

US sees record COVID- 19 deaths

- By Carla K. Johnson and Lisa Marie Pane

Officials registered nearly 3,900 deaths in a single day as virus continues to surge.

The U. S. registered more COVID - 19 deaths in a single day than ever before — nearly 3,900 — on the very day the mob attack on the Capitol laid bare some of the same, deep political divisions that have hampered the battle against the pandemic.

The virus is surging in several states, with Calif ornia hit particular­ly hard, reporting Thursday a record two- day total of 1,042 coronaviru­s deaths. Skyrocketi­ng caseloads there are threatenin­g to force hospitals to ration care and essentiall­y decide who lives and who dies.

“Folks are gasping for breath. Folks look like they’re drowning when they are in bed right in front of us,” said Dr. Jeffrey Chien, an emergency room physician at Santa Clara Valley Regional Medical Center, urging people to do their part to help slow the spread. “I’m begging everyone to help us out because we aren’t the front line. We’re the last line.”

About 1.9 million people around the world have died of the coronaviru­s, more than 363,000 in the U. S. alone. December was by far the nation’s deadliest month yet, and health experts are warning that January could be more terrible still because of family gatherings and travel over the holidays.

A new, more contagious variant of the virus is spreading around the globe and in the U.S. Also, it remains to be seen what effect the thousands of supporters of President Donald Trump who converged this week in Washington, many of them without masks, will have on the spread of the scourge.

Trump has long downplayed the virus and scorned masks, and many of his ardent supporters have followed his example. He has also raged against lockdowns and egged on protesters objecting to restrictio­ns in states such as Michigan, where armed supporters invaded the statehouse last spring.

On Wednesday, t he day a horde of protesters breached the U.S. Capitol, disrupting efforts to certify the election of Joe Biden, the U.S. recorded 3,865 virus deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University. The numbers can fluctuate dramatical­ly after holidays and weekends, and the figure is subject to revision.

“The domestic terrorists overran the Capitol police, just as the virus has been allowed to overrun Americans,” said Dr. Eric Topol, head of the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute .“The U.S. lost control of a Trump- incited mob and a Trump- playeddown pandemic virus.”

Some of the forces contributi­ng to the eruption of violence were partially foreseen by experts in global disease planning when they held a tabletop exercise in 2019, said Dr. Eric Toner, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

“We did consider the possibilit­y of active disinforma­tion and using a pandemic for political gain,” Toner said. “Real life turned out to be much worse.”

In California, health authoritie­s Thursday reported 583 new deaths, a day after 459 people died. The overall death toll there stands at more than 28,000. The state also registered more than a quarter- million new weekly cases.

Los Angeles County, the nation’s most populous with 10 million residents, and nearly two dozen other counties have essentiall­y run out of intensive care unit beds for COVID- 19 patients.

“This is a health crisis of epic proportion­s,” said Barbara Ferrer, public health director for Los Angeles County.

Guidelines posted on the website for Methodist Hospital of Southern California warned: “If a patient becomes extremely ill and very unlikely to survive their illness ( even with life- saving treatment), then certain resources ... may be allocated to another patient who is more likely to survive.”

As of Thursday, t he Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 5.3 million people in the U.S. had gotten their first shot of the COVID19 vaccine — well short of the hundreds of millions of Americans who will need to be vaccinated to stop the virus.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON ?? School nurse Dorothy Burns gets a vaccinatio­n Thursday from a public health worker in DeKalb County, Georgia.
CURTIS COMPTON/ ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON School nurse Dorothy Burns gets a vaccinatio­n Thursday from a public health worker in DeKalb County, Georgia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States