California Covid-19 Update: Statewide Available ICU Capacity Falls To 0% On Christmas Day

Authored by deadline.com and submitted by Brothanogood
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In Covid-19 ravaged California on Christmas Day, remaining ICU capacity for the first time fell to zero across the entire state.

Some counties, like Los Angeles and Orange County have been at 0% for over a week, but the state at large has recently floated between 1 and 3%.

The drop is likely due to less-populated counties in the state, which had previously seen much better numbers, finally dipping.

California Governor Gavin Newsom said the state had 2.5% ICU capacity on Monday. Wednesday, he reported it had fallen to 1.1%. On Christmas, one day after it became the first state 2 millionth infection, available capacity officially dropped to 0% in California.

Today we reach 2 million #COVID19 cases but behind those numbers is a person. 351 lives lost yesterday – our hearts are with those families. To our health care heroes – we see you. You matter. There is nothing more courageous than the work you do. Thank you. pic.twitter.com/ajvmNXXViP — Office of the Governor of California (@CAgovernor) December 24, 2020

There are still beds available in the state because, as health officials have explained, the official omits NICU availability — for kids — and other beds not appropriate for the majority of the state’s adults.

Related Story California Becomes First State To Surpass 2 Million Covid-19 Cases

Newsom has repeatedly stressed that 0% is the just bottom of hospitals’ traditional ICU network. He said again this week that about another 20% “surge capacity” can — and has — been added through bringing in federal workers, breaking the normal nurse-to-patient ratio and sourcing more ICU nurses — such as those recently retired — from the state’s population.

Still, scenes of patients lined up on stretchers outside of emergency rooms are beginning to emerge. They are frighteningly similar to images seen earlier in the pandemic in New York and in hard-hit countries like Italy.

California hospitals and health systems have reached a crisis caring for surges of #COVID19 patients and have an urgent prescription and plea for this holiday: #DontShareYourAir. @sutterhealth @dignityhealth

For more information visit: https://t.co/14j50rKWtE pic.twitter.com/0qnjKKhpt9 — Kaiser Permanente Southern California (@KPSCALnews) December 23, 2020

On Friday, director James Gunn tweeted about the heartbreaking trouble a friend’s family had finding treatment at a hospital because of Covid-related overcrowding. “My friend’s father had cancer surgery a week ago,” wrote Gunn. “Two days later he had complications. He went back to the hospital but he couldn’t get a bed because of all the Covid patients…”

My friend’s father had cancer surgery a week ago. Two days later he had complications. He went back to the hospital but he couldn’t get a bed because of all the Covid patients, thanks to places like #LaScala (I will never, ever eat at you again.) https://t.co/rzB0Q8YSy3 — James Gunn (@JamesGunn) December 26, 2020

One bizarre side note in Sunday’s numbers: The state’s Covid-19 dashboard displayed 0 new hospitalizations due to the pandemic. The daily new infections number — 39,144 — was there, as was the still sky-high death tally at 312. That’s the fourth-highest number of lives lost since the beginning of the pandemic.

After reaching the state’s test positivity rate reached 13.3% about a week ago, that daily number has come down over the past week, to 12.6% on Thursday and 12.4% on Friday.

The L.A. Public Health Department announced it would not release comprehensive numbers on Friday due to “an outage with Spectrum Service in the Los Angeles area.” It did report that there were 6,708 people with Covid hospitalized countywide. A has been the case recently, 20% of them are in the ICU. It is unclear what impact the outage may have had state numbers.

City News Service contributed to this report.

showsomesideboob on December 27th, 2020 at 03:20 UTC »

I worked yesterday and we had so many codes they couldn't replace the crash carts fast enough and anesthesia was running meds over from another unit. We're about 15% over capacity. People don't understand this. We're still getting our regular traumas, strokes, etc on top of everything this time of year.

hey-look-over-there on December 27th, 2020 at 00:36 UTC »

My local ER has a 3+ hour waiting time and is actively evaluating people first before making the decision to send them to the urgent care across the street, admitting them to the ER, or taking them away to the covid unit. There's people with IVs waiting in the halls. The covid unit is a separate building that is covered in makeshift walls and looks like something out of movie. It's uncanny how the covid unit has people wearing full face mask/hoods with indistinguishable features.

aloha_hard on December 27th, 2020 at 00:15 UTC »

Beds are only part of the equation. ICU nurses and Respiratory Therapists are in short supply even if you made more space.