^Always wrong and always lies.
Then list them. On the date they went over capacity. Use the state reporting site to show the data. Or you lied.
^Always wrong and always lies.
Here in Apple Valley the only capacity is overcapacity — sometimes by double and even triple the number of beds. Officially, there are 213 beds in the hospital and about 20 ICU spaces. But those numbers are meaningless now as patients are treated in hallways, lobbies and other improvised wards.
“Every day we’re running at 200, 250 percent capacity. That includes the emergency department, the ICU, all of the inpatient units,” said Randy Loveless, the interim director of St. Mary’s emergency department, among other critical areas. “We have well over double the number of patients that we were built to house.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graph...ovid-capacity/
In Northern California, Queen of the Valley Medical Center in Napa is coming up short on doctors and nurses.
“We do still have physical beds available, but we need staff to take care of patients. It doesn’t do a whole lot of good to be sitting in a bed with nobody taking care of you,” chief medical officer Dr. Amy Herold said.
https://nypost.com/2020/12/19/ca-wil...-keep-surging/
fldren always wrong.
Asking for months
What a liar
Just like mask data. Cannot provide
report for prisons in all 50 states, from the Brennan Center:
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2...rus-in-prisons
mass testing, where implemented, improved outcomes
https://covid19.counciloncj.org/2021...state-prisons/
- States that did not use a mass-testing strategy for their incarcerated populations had COVID-19 death rates among incarcerated people that were nearly eight times the death rate for non-incarcerated populations similar in age, gender, and race/ethnicity. This disparity was cut in half in states that implemented a mass testing strategy.
parolees died of COVID waiting to be released. far more Texas prisoners should have been furloughed.
https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/a...-report-shows/Eleven people who died in prison during the pandemic had been approved for parole more than a year earlier, the report found.
One explanation for the delay is that those who required programming that wasn't available at their prisons had to wait months while transfers among units were stopped to limit the virus' spread.
some posters like to deflect by putting all the emphasis on convicts supposedly undeserving of any protection or sympathy, thereby gliding past the effect COVID has on prison staff, their families and the communities they live in.
On sucker Biden's time, kids.
by contrast, Riker's holds a lot of folks who are awaiting trial -- who are not guilty of anything yet
The USA jail/prison system proves the fatal, inhumane hypocrisy of the USA being pro-life or a Christian country
At the bottom rungs of the USA, humans are treated as sub-human, treated worse that livestock.
too many people get locked up for too long, at great public expense, without any corresponding gain in public safety.
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