Hospitals overflowed and bodies loaded into semitones as California reaches breakthrough level with COVID-19

The state of California has become a major driver of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.

On New Year’s Eve, 585 COVID-19 deaths were reported in the state, making up more than one-seventh of the deaths from the virus reported in the United States that day. More than 2.4 million people, in a state of 39 million, were arrested, and nearly 39,000 more were confirmed Sunday.

In Los Angeles, San Diego, and throughout Southern and Central California Valley, hospital intensive care units have run out of space completely. On Jan. 1, more than 20,000 people were hospitalized across the state, compared to the height of the spike on July 8 with only 800 hospitalized.

A cooling half-trailer sits outside a hospital in Southern California while it waits to be loaded with bodies (Credit: WSWS)

The flood of coronavirus cases has exposed the unprepared, unprepared health care system in the country’s richest state. The Los Angeles Times reports that “hospitals are scrambling to find staff” and that there is a “harmful shortage in oxygen tanks. The paper refers to Christina Ghaly, Los Angeles County’s director of health services, who described non-COVID outpatient services as a “skeletal team. She said the county was on the brink of disaster.

Ambulances in Los Angeles county are waiting up to eight hours to have their patients discharged at hospitals, according to Cathy Chidester, director of Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services. In some cases, ambulances are being redirected, or patients may have been sent home directly.

A nurse in Southern California sent the World Socialist Website picture of a cooling semi-truck that had just arrived at the hospital they work east of Los Angeles. Hospitals and mortuaries across the state are issuing rental orders for similar units to treat the ascending casualties as they cross the health care system.

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