Cases have skyrocketed after the Thanksgiving holiday, and impacts from Christmas and New Year’s celebrations are still unfolding. As of Saturday, more than 20.4 million people have been infected with the virus in the US and at least 350,186 people have died, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. And health experts worry what will happen to those numbers if infections continue to spread.
“This is about total collapse of the health care system if we have another spike,” said Dr. Brad Spellberg, chief medical officer at the Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center. “And we, in the hospital, cannot stop that. We can only react to it. It is the public that has the power to put a stop to the spread of this virus by obeying the public health guidance that have been put out.”
In California, emergency room officials said hospitals are treating an unprecedented number of coronavirus patients.
Design and construction experts from the US Army Corps of Engineers have been deployed to the Los Angeles area to “evaluate and where necessary upgrade oxygen delivery systems” at about a half dozen hospitals.
One area hospital converted administrative offices and break rooms into treatment areas for their coronavirus patients, said Col. Julie Balten, commander of the Los Angeles District for the Corps of Engineers.
4 million vaccines administered
Though the distribution of coronavirus vaccines is currently limited to healthcare workers and long term care patients, officials hope the number of cases and hospitalizations will eventually be reduced by the vaccinations.
“We do have a little bit of a lag in the doses administered, so that’s coming through a few days after they’re delivered. I don’t see it as a major system failure,” she said. “We just aren’t seeing the vaccine going into arms as quickly. But the infrastructure we’ve set up I think is working.”
The UK adopted that strategy in order to give as many people as possible the first dose as quickly as possible, saying that it affords some amount of protection.
“We make decisions based on data. We don’t have any data of giving a single dose and waiting for more than the normal period of time” to give the second dose, Fauci said.
A difficult start to the new year
As Americans rang in the new year, almost 11,000 families grieved the new loss of a loved one to Covid-19.
Arkansas reported more than 4,300 new cases Friday.
Texas health officials reported record-high Covid-19 hospitalizations across the state for the fifth day in a row, with more than 12,400 patients.
And Georgia announced a new record high of 8,769 new Covid-19 cases in the state Friday.
Gov. Brian Kemp said the Georgia World Congress Center convention center in downtown Atlanta has been turned into an overflow hospital.
New York added almost 16,500 new cases on Friday, only a day after it hit its highest ever one-day case count.
“As we start 2021, I encourage all New Yorkers to look to their better angels and continue the practices we know stop the spread of this virus – wash your hands, socially distance, and wear a mask,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement.
CNN’s Chuck Johnston, Virginia Langmaid, Paul Vercammen, Holly Yan and Christina Maxouris contributed to this report.
You may also like
-
UK coronavirus variant has been reported in 86 countries, WHO says
-
NASA technology can help save whale sharks says Australian marine biologist and ECOCEAN founder, Brad Norman
-
California Twentynine Palms: Explosives are missing from the nation’s largest Marine Corps base and an investigation is underway
-
Trump unhappy with his impeachment attorney’s performance, sources say
-
Lunar New Year 2021: Ushering in the Year of the Ox