OT Coronavirus: America in chaos, News and Updates. One million Americans dead and counting

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This latest surge is probably a quick spreading variant in LA.

Also, the poorer Latino communities are probably getting hit hardest. Lots of family gatherings, distrust of masks, and multiple families or generations living together in tighter spaces. Add that most of the jobs are probably ones you can't work from home or get around poor health and safety standards.
 
Every person in power or influence who either said virus was a hoax or denounced preventive measures should go to the very back of the line for vaccine. After all the young healthy people.
 
DENVER, Colo.– On Tuesday, Governor Jared Polis and state health officials announced Colorado’s first case of the of COVID-19 variant B.1.1.7, the same variant discovered in the UK.

The Colorado State Laboratory confirmed and notified the Center for Disease Control (CDC) of the case.

The individual is a male in his 20s who is currently in isolation in Elbert County and has no travel history.
 
How do you sleep at night? Good lord the doom and gloom you find.

Trump administration's goal to vaccinate 80% of US population by June may take a DECADE to complete at current rate as CDC data reveals only two million Americans have been vaccinated in three weeks
  • More than 3million people will need to get vaccinated daily in order to meet the government's June deadline, according to a new analysis of CDC data
  • CDC data reveals that 2,127,143 first doses of coronavirus vaccines from both Pfizer and Moderna have been administered since early this month
  • 'We're obviously not going to hit our goal of 20 million,' Dr Jha, Dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, told Good Morning America Tuesday
  • He criticized the federal government for failing to help states plan massive vaccine administration campaigns
  • Nearly 11.5 million doses have been shipped to all 50 states cumulatively
  • US officials promised for months to vaccinate 20 million Americans by the end of the year
  • Another 4.7 million doses will be shipped to states this week, meaning a total of 15.5 million doses will be distributed by year-end, but not administered
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...lation-June-DECADE-complete-current-rate.html
 
Oxygen supply issues forced five Los Angeles-area hospitals to declare an 'internal disaster'


(CNN) Oxygen supply issues led at least five Los Angeles County hospitals to declare an "internal disaster" Sunday, which included turning patients away.

There are multiple issues involving oxygen delivery to patients, but generally the problem is not an absolute shortage of oxygen, according to Dr. Christina Ghaly, Los Angeles County Health Services director.
Instead, at some area hospitals, aging infrastructure that pumps oxygen to patient rooms is unable to keep up with the high number of patients needing oxygen.

"They're not able to maintain the pressure in the pipe to maintain oxygen delivery at that high level of pressure that's required to be delivered through the high-flow oxygen delivery vehicles," Ghaly said. "Because of that high flow through the pipes, sometimes it's freezing in the pipes, and obviously if it freezes then you can't have good flow of oxygen."

The oxygen issues come as Los Angeles County sees a near-overwhelming surge of Covid-19 patients taking nearly every hospital to capacity. Nearly 7,000 patients are currently hospitalized, with about 20% of those in intensive care units.

California has seen a startling increase in coronavirus infections, hospitalizations and deaths over the past two months. The state averaged more than 40,000 new coronavirus infections every day for the week prior to Christmas, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, filling up hospitals and pushing health care workers to consider ways to ration care.

To solve the oxygen supply issue, some hospitals are moving Covid-19 patients down to lower floors within the medical center, which makes it easier to pump the oxygen through pipes without it freezing.

Another challenge, Ghaly said, is that several supply companies have a shortage of the actual oxygen canisters that patients can take home once discharged from the hospital. Without the canisters, patients who might otherwise be able to go home -- and free up a bed and health care workers' time -- have to stay in the hospital.

Los Angeles County Department of Health Services confirmed that several hospitals have gone on "internal disaster" designation because of oxygen issues, closing themselves off to incoming EMS traffic. The hospitals most impacted are in the eastern areas of LA County and the San Fernando Valley, the department said.

One aspect of the issue was just the sheer amount of oxygen needed to treat severe Covid-19, which primarily affects the lungs.

"First, high levels of oxygen are necessary to treat patients with COVID-19, and that level may be up to 10 times more than normal usage," the deparmtent said in a statement. "Hospitals in general are running out of oxygen sooner than under their normal conditions, and the oxygen suppliers are changing their processes to respond to the hospitals' needs."

Other hospitals are seeing shortages of space and staff.

At Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital in Los Angeles, for example, patients are being treated in tents outside the hospital, in a conference room and in the chapel. Gurneys are taken into the gift shop. Rationing care could be next, hospital CEO Dr. Elaine Batchlor said Monday.

"If we continue to see an increase in the number of Covid patients, we may be forced to do something that, as health professionals, we all really just loathe having to even think about," she said.

At Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, California, nurses that usually care for one or two patients are now caring for three or four, infectious disease specialist Dr. Kimberly Shriner told CNN on Sunday.

"We have a limited number of ventilators, we have a limited number of ICU beds," Shriner said, adding that a team including a bioethicist, a community member, a physician, a nurse and an administrative leader will decide how to divide those resources if it comes down to it.

These issues can combine for some difficult decisions ahead, said CNN medical analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner.

"If you don't have respirators, you don't have nurses to care for patients, you don't have ICU beds, we will have to have these terrible discussions with families, which is why people need to stay home, and when they go out, they need to wear a mask," Reiner said.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/29/us/california-hospital-oxygen-covid/index.html

 
Infuriating that we finally have vaccines, multiple approved, millions sent out and we can’t just give shots out to the masses
 
"But why do we have to be locked down again?"

Exhibit A, your honor.

Exhibit B is the 3 mexican families crammed into a tiny apartment.

#1 cause of spread are family gatherings. If you are locked down, that's what people will resort to.
 
Infuriating that we finally have vaccines, multiple approved, millions sent out and we can’t just give shots out to the masses
Just because we have vaccines doesn't mean it's time to ease restrictions. This process of vacating enough people will take a long time.
 

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