California coronavirus lockdowns extended as hospitals teeter on brink
of crisis
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[December 31, 2020]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Strict stay-at-home
orders were renewed indefinitely on Tuesday for much of California, a
leading U.S. hot spot of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the state's top
health official said that many hospitals were teetering on the brink of
crisis.
Tough restrictions imposed earlier this month on social and economic
life were extended in densely populated Southern California - home to
more than half of the state's 40 million people - based on data showing
intensive care units there likely to stay filled at or near capacity for
weeks to come.
The stay-at-home orders, among the strictest in the United States, are
also being renewed in the agricultural heartland of the San Joaquin
Valley, whose hospital ICUs have likewise remained for weeks with little
or no bed space to spare.
California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said Los
Angeles County, the most populous county, has been particularly hard hit
by weeks of surging infections and hospitalizations.
At least 90 percent of the county's hospitals, he said, have been
stretched so thin by the influx of COVID-19 patients that they were
forced to divert incoming emergency patients to other facilities for
much of the day over the past weekend.
No hospitals have yet formally notified public health authorities that
they have reached the point of operating on a "crisis care" basis,
involving wholesale rationing of medical treatment and supplies to the
sickest patients, Ghaly said.
However, he added, "some hospitals in Southern California have put in
place some practices that would be part of crisis care," such as
weighing "the effectiveness of certain treatments for certain patients
who are unlikely to survive, or do well."
Ghaly said he knew of no instances so drastic as to require doctors to
choose, for example, between two patients who needed to be put on a
ventilator when only one was available. But he said hospital managers
were doing all they could to prepare for deteriorating conditions in
order to avoid such dire scenarios.
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A hospital worker pushes two Computer on Wheels (COW)
workstations outside the emergency room at the Community
Hospital of Huntington Park during a surge in positive
coronavirus cases in Huntington Park, California, U.S.
December 29, 2020. REUTERS/Bing Guan
"We could see the worst of it in early January," he told reporters
in an online briefing. "And most of the hospital leaders I've talked
to in Southern California are bracing for exactly that."
The bleak projections are based on expectations that many
individuals will continue, as they have, to disregard public health
warnings and mandates to avoid crowds and unnecessary travel for the
remainder of the winter holidays, fueling further spikes in
coronavirus transmissions.
Authorities want to prevent diminishment of the state's healthcare
system as much as possible until the newly approved COVID-19
vaccines can be made widely available to the public in the spring.
Residents under stay-at-home orders are required for the time being
to remain largely indoors and avoid travel, except as necessary for
permitted activities such as grocery shopping, medical appointments,
individual outdoor exercise and dog walks.
Constraints have also been placed on a host of commercial
activities, with restaurants limited to takeout and pickup service
only and bars closed altogether.
The orders can be lifted once projections show that a region's
available ICU capacity will reach at least 15%.
The San Francisco Bay area and greater Sacramento are under the same
restrictions, with ICU capacities hovering at around 10% and 19%,
respectively. They each come up for their first three-week review
early next month.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by Grant McCool)
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