![]() ![]() Female doctors of any kind where so rare in the 30's, that this young lady from the Bronx Zoo made the moment that much more memorable. Here he was, a big tough NYC NG Captain/ experienced Vet, and this competent young vet just handed him his hat. She step into the cage, gave the bear a shot you-know-where, and promptly left. The zoo sent over a young, slight of build, female veterinarian. His big idea was to call the zoo and stand by to assist. He couldn't figure how to get into the cage, administer to bear, and not be mauled. I remember the time he told me about treating a dancing bear in a cage at a bar somewhere in NYC (1930's). ![]() ![]() He was a great story teller, and a great patriot. The sickest patients still must be transferred, but the larger hospital 35 miles away is awash in its own heavy volume of Covid patients and is reducing staff levels.Not only is the book entertaining, the man was too. “We don’t have a larger system pumping money into us or something like that.” The hospital used federal Covid aid to invest in medical gas lines so patients could be given oxygen. The hospital’s nurses, who typically work three 12-hour shifts a week, are taking as many as five or six shifts each week. “It is sometimes a daily and hourly struggle to make sure we have adequate staff in the hospital,” he said. Keene, have come down with the virus since March. About a fourth of the hospital’s 100 employees, including Mr. His tiny hospital usually has no more than a half-dozen patients on a busy day, but may now treat twice that number. When we have Covid cases, it very much taxes our ability.” “We don’t perform surgeries or anything like that here. “We don’t have intensive care units,” said Tony Keene, the chief executive of Sullivan County Memorial Hospital, a rural hospital licensed for 25 beds in Milan, Mo. Smaller hospitals are under significant stress. To relieve pressure on its big hospitals, Intermountain is keeping more patients at its smaller centers, monitored virtually by specialists at the larger hospitals who consult with the local doctors via remote links. As health care providers, we are terrified of that becoming reality.” “Soon you or someone you love may need us, but we won’t be able to provide the lifesaving care you need, whether for Covid-19, cancer, heart disease or other urgent conditions. “Without immediate change, our hospitals will be too full to treat all of those with the virus and those with other illnesses or injuries,” they warned. Workers at the hospital issued a plea last Sunday, published as a two-page ad in The Wisconsin State Journal, asking state residents to help prevent further spread of the virus. The decline, largely driven by the pandemic, was particularly pronounced among Indigenous communities. Heavy Toll: The average life expectancy of Americans fell precipitously in 20.students: The math and reading scores of 9-year-olds dropped steeply, erasing two decades of progress. Educational Declines : Test results show the pandemic’s effect on U.S.So far, the rollout is methodical, but muted. Updated Boosters: As masks have fallen away and quarantines have diminished, the new vaccines are one of the last remaining weapons in America’s arsenal against the coronavirus.Biden’s Comments: In an interview that aired on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” President Biden said that “the pandemic is over.” But 400 to 500 Americans are still dying every day of Covid-19.And public health experts warn that the holidays may speed the already fast-moving pace of infection, driving the demand for hospital beds and medical care ever higher.Ī record number of Americans - 90,000 - are now hospitalized with Covid, and new cases of infection had been climbing to nearly 200,000 daily. There is no end in sight for the nation’s hospitals as the pandemic continues to hammer cities and rural areas across the country, totaling 13 million cases so far this year. On any single day, some hospitals have had to turn away transfer requests for patients needing urgent care or incoming emergencies.Īnd rising infection rates among nurses and other frontline workers have doubled the patient load on those left standing. Despite months of planning, though, many of the nation’s hospital systems are now slammed with a staggering swell of patients, no available beds and widening shortages of nurses and doctors. In the spring, the pandemic was concentrated mainly in hard-hit regions like New York, which offered lessons to hospitals in other states anticipating the spread of the coronavirus.
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