Los Angeles County: a further surge in COVID-19 patients. Some hospitals have been forced to temporarily cease ambulance arrivals and use gift shops as makeshift treatment rooms, a report said.
The Los Angeles Times reported that Los Angeles County is experiencing its most challenging moment since the onset of the outbreak. The paper said one person died from the virus every 10 minutes in the county on Christmas Eve.
One of the myriad challenges facing Southern California’s medical system, which is overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients, involves one of the most basic staples of any hospital.
Oxygen.
Officials are having problems getting the amount of oxygen needed by critically ill COVID-19 patients who are struggling to breathe as their inflamed lungs are being damaged or destroyed.
Problems on Sunday caused at least five hospitals in L.A. County to declare an internal disaster, which closed the facilities to all ambulance traffic — not just certain types of ambulance patients, as is more typical.
Dr. Christina Ghaly, the health services director for the county, told the paper that the worst is “almost certainly yet to come” due to the expected post-Christmas surge on top of the surge.
The LA Times reported that on Sunday, 94% of the hospitals in the county that receive patients in ambulances were forced to divert some, due to spacing issues. Some patients didn’t leave ambulances for up to eight hours so they could be treated inside the vehicle.
“When you walk into the ICU, and you see every bed occupied by a ventilated COVID patient, with tubes coming in all orifices of their body, you begin to understand that we are not dealing with what we were dealing with 10 months ago,” Dr. Brad Spellberg, the chief medical officer at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center, told the paper.
Models used for planning show hospitalizations more than doubling in the next month from about 20,000 to more than 50,000. Los Angeles County, which accounts for a quarter of the state’s 10 million residents, has about 40% of the state’s 24,000 deaths.
The county is approaching a grim “milestone” of 10,000 deaths.
“These are figures that can’t be normalized,” County Supervisor Hilda Solis said. “Just like the sound of ambulance sirens, we can’t tune this out.”
(Fox News / LA Times).