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Published 01:52 IST, January 10th 2021

US: California hospitals cope with impact of virus surge

As cases surge across Southern California, nurses at one Orange County hospital struggle to cope with the daily death toll on their full units.

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom's administration and the state's hospital association are at odds over how best to create space for critically ill coronavirus patients at already strained medical facilities that soon could be overwhelmed by the expected surge of new cases from holiday gatherings.

A surge following Halloween and Thanksgiving produced record hospitalizations and now the most seriously ill of those patients are dying in unprecedented numbers. California health authorities reported Thursday 583 new deaths and a record two-day total of 1,042.

The state has deployed 88 refrigerated trailers, up from 60 a few weeks ago, for use as makeshift morgues, mostly in hard-hit Southern California.

As cases surge across Southern California, nurses at one Orange County hospital struggle to cope with the daily death toll on their full units.

"Just today we had two deaths on this unit. And that's pretty the norm," said St. Joseph Hospital of Orange nurse Caroline Brandenburger. "I usually see one to two every shift. Super sad."

Hospitalizations are nearing 22,000 and state models project the number could reach 30,000 by Feb 1. Already, many hospitals in Los Angeles and other hard-hit areas are struggling to keep up and warned they may need to ration care as intensive care beds dwindle.

Earlier this week, state health officials caught hospitals off guard and left them scrambling with new orders limiting nonessential surgeries and requiring hospitals that have scarce ICU space to accept patients from those that have run out, an order that may require transferring patients hundreds of miles.

01:52 IST, January 10th 2021