A Texas hospital is so overrun with coronavirus cases that officials say it will send the patients least likely to survive home to die

  • A Texas county said it was forming a committee to decide which coronavirus patients were most likely to die and send them home to their families.
  • Starr County Memorial Hospital is overrun with coronavirus cases, and hospitals elsewhere in Texas and in nearby states are also full, officials said.
  • The county's health authority said the "situation is desperate" and "there is nowhere to put these patients."
https://news.yahoo.com/texas-hospital-overrun-coronavirus-cases-124224673.html
 

Starr county is in the Rio Grande valley. Population 66,000 people. It has had 1,559 cases of Covid-19. Your headline and article is inflammatory and highly biased. As are you, Robert. Just keeping it real.
Its not 'his" article. Its news that he shared. Don't shoot the messenger for wanting to share news. We all can decide for ourselves to read or scroll past. We all can decide to believe what we read or not. I read the same article and was going to post it, however saw the Robert had already done so. Thank you Robert for keeping us informed.
 
  • A Texas county said it was forming a committee to decide which coronavirus patients were most likely to die and send them home to their families.
  • Starr County Memorial Hospital is overrun with coronavirus cases, and hospitals elsewhere in Texas and in nearby states are also full, officials said.
  • The county's health authority said the "situation is desperate" and "there is nowhere to put these patients."
https://news.yahoo.com/texas-hospital-overrun-coronavirus-cases-124224673.html

"Home" is probably over the border in Mexico. ..very poor area down there, with little resources. Surprised that they even have a hospital.
 
There are 28 patients in the county's COVID care unit, three of whom are on ventilators and life support.
Sorry, but this is what happens when you're in a county that only has one hospital. We had a similar problem with an overwhelmed hospital years ago as the retiree population swelled, and until a second one was built nearby, patient dumping was a common occurrence.
As usual, these news outlets run a (sky is falling) headline, hoping nobody will check the story.
28 covid patients and only 3 on ventilators ??? come on folks.
 
This is very sad news--I think they should somehow try to make more room like they have in other places like my state.
 
"Home" is probably over the border in Mexico. ..very poor area down there, with little resources. Surprised that they even have a hospital.
Home is where your bed is. It might be a piece of dirt under a bridge or a king size bed in a mansion, it might change night to night or remain stable, but where you sleep that is home. As for assuming home might be over the border because someone lives in a poor area with little resources. Ever been to Watts? Or Ohio? Or the Deep South?

Or a million places in the good old USA, that are poor and have little resources.
 
Home is where your bed is. It might be a piece of dirt under a bridge or a king size bed in a mansion, it might change night to night or remain stable, but where you sleep that is home. As for assuming home might be over the border because someone lives in a poor area with little resources. Ever been to Watts? Or Ohio? Or the Deep South?

Or a million places in the good old USA, that are poor and have little resources.

That area is the Texas-Mexico border... there isn't much to assume about the people down there or their lifestyle if you've ever been there.

Deep South? ...huh? Look at a map.
 
It's called triage and happens in times of disaster. Other states set criteria early on. I do, however, think there should be makeshift hospice units available as an alternative instead of sending patients home if there's no one capable of caring for them. If there are caregivers at home, then those unlikely to survive should be sent home with hospice services.

Graph from link above illustrating Alabama's policy:

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As quickly as this virus can get out of control in a specific location, it is probably nearly impossible for smaller hospitals to suddenly increase their capacities by any substantial amount. Since this is a nation wide epidemic, there may not even be many options for transferring patients to larger hospitals. If this virus doesn't show signs of slowing down soon, there may be several locations around the country having to make hard choices about treating those with little hope for recovery.
 
That area is the Texas-Mexico border... there isn't much to assume about the people down there or their lifestyle if you've ever been there.

Deep South? ...huh? Look at a map.
My daughter lives in El Paso, a border town, and she, and her family, had the virus. She didn't return to Mexico, she is not poor, she is not from Mexico, and her lifestyle is whatever she wants it to be. She is college educated, makes over six figures, and does very well. She is bilingual.

She does not have a prejudice bone in her body. Your assumptions are wrong.
 
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My daughter lives in El Paso, a border town, and she, and her family, had the virus. She didn't return to Mexico, she is not poor, she is not from Mexico, and her lifestyle is whatever she wants it to be. She is college educated, makes over six figures, and does very well. She is bilingual.

She does not have a prejudice bone in her body. Your assumptions are wrong.


Again .... The Rio Grande Valley is nowhere near El Paso ... El Paso is a prosperous city hundreds of miles away to the west.
Again ... look at a map.
 
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So sad this is happening. If the hospital can't handle them all, what else can they do? Put them in the basement? On the roof? Out on the street? At least they'll be in a familiar environment at home. I'd rather be home than stuck in a corner somewhere watching strangers go by.
 
Again .... The Rio Grande Valley is nowhere near El Paso ... El Paso is a prosperous city hundred of miles away to the west.
Again ... look at a map.
I don’t have to look at a map. Generalizing the prosperity of a people is ridiculous. Comparing what you consider prosperity to what someone else considers prosperity is a judgement no one is qualified to make.

A person who sleeps on the ground will indeed feel prosperous when they find a large box to sleep in. A person without a blanket will indeed find themselves prosperous when given a blanket. JC slept on the ground in a cave and had little access to services. Yet, he was beloved of GOD.

IMO, you are wrong.
 
Home is where your bed is. It might be a piece of dirt under a bridge or a king size bed in a mansion, it might change night to night or remain stable, but where you sleep that is home. As for assuming home might be over the border because someone lives in a poor area with little resources. Ever been to Watts? Or Ohio? Or the Deep South?

Or a million places in the good old USA, that are poor and have little resources.
Watts is less poor than you apparently imagine, with a current median house price of $400K. There are plenty of excellent medical and other resources nearby, and there always have been. Please do not perpetuate old stereotypes about that city.
 
Watts is less poor than you apparently imagine, with a current median house price of $400K. There are plenty of excellent medical and other resources nearby, and there always have been. Please do not perpetuate old stereotypes about that city.
Yup it is an old stereotype. I apologize. It was that way when I lived nearby which was decades ago.
 

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