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Wednesday, August 18, 2021

The new Texas COVID-19 surge could be worse than anything the state has seen yet

As someone who needed urgent care over the Christmas holidays in the middle of the pandemic, this was the most bone-chilling paragraph in this story to read:

“When you’re told by the powers that be that you have 12 ICU beds in Dallas County, that means you have 12 ICU beds for the traffic on I-35, 12 ICU beds for the stroke [victim], 12 ICU beds for the five borderline COVID patients we have in the hospital right now,” Casanova said. “When we say that we may come to be in a situation where we are looking at some impossible decisions about focusing our care and our efforts on those that have the highest likelihood of survival so that we can save as many lives as possible, that equation is not just for COVID patients. That occurs for all patients.”

None of us wants to be in a desperate situation where we need urgent care and we get triaged out of getting it. God forbid that this should happen to anyone—and how traumatic for hospital officials to be the arbiters of such matters.

Do get vaccinated, everybody. Wear a mask in public places and do abide by all the safety protocols. None of this is fun for any of us. It's simply what we have to do to protect each other, especially our children, grandchildren, and school children, generally, who have not been vaccinated. 

Remember, that neither COVID-19 nor the Delta variant are bacteria that can be killed with antibiotics. The only thing we can do is eliminate ourselves as hosts so that these viruses have nowhere to go. 

If you're in Texas, do read this deeply-concerning post that warns us of a foreboding crisis that is still within our power to stem. We must all do our part.

-Angela Valenzuela

The new Texas COVID-19 surge could be worse than anything the state has seen yet

“It’s going to be close,” one health official said as a record number of Texas hospitals run out of intensive care beds and warn that they may soon have more COVID-19 patients than they can handle.



“This is the fourth round of what should have been a three-round fight.”

— Dr. Mark Casanova, a member of the Texas Medical Association’s COVID-19 Task Force

Available ICU beds at pandemic low 

Hospitalizations approach a pandemic high 

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