Santa Cruz Sentinel

One family’s virus nightmare reflects deepening US crisis

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

First, Theresa Pirozzi’s 85-year- old dad got sick and was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance. Days later, her mom was so weak she could barely walk. Now, instead of getting ready for Christmas, Pirozzi is anxiously awaiting updates from the hospital where both of her parents are in intensive care with the coronaviru­s.

“I’m not putting up decoration­s in here. It’s just not right, right now,” Pirozzi said from her parents’ home in Oak Park, California. “I’m physically ill from worry.”

The couple is emblematic of the crisis deepening at an alarming rate in California, where hospitals are being stretched to their limits as the virus explodes across the state. Nearly 17,000 people were hospitaliz­ed with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 infections as of Friday and a state model that uses current data to forecast future trends shows the number could reach an unfathomab­le 75,000 by mid-January.

With California’s more than 48,000 new cases leading the way, the United

States as a whole added a record 249,709 new cases of COVID-19 in one day, according to Johns Hopkins University. An additional 2,814 people died nationwide, pushing the death toll to more than 313,000.

Texas, Florida, New York and Tennessee all recorded more than 10,400 new cases each. Over the past two weeks, the sevenday rolling average for new cases in the U.S. jumped to 219,324 daily from 183,787, an increase of almost 20%.

Cases were on the rise be

fore Thanksgivi­ng, and holiday gatherings sent them even higher. Health officials now fear the increase will only be compounded through Christmas and New Year’s. In many places, health officials say, people tired of wearing face masks and staying away from others are simply disregardi­ng suggested precaution­s.

While federal regulators have approved two vaccines to combat the illness and doses already have been given to thousands of people, mainly health care workers, widespread vaccinatio­ns for the general public aren’t expected before spring.

Several states have said the federal government told them that next week’s shipment of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine will be smaller than originally projected. The Army general in charge of getting COVID-19 vaccines out across the U.S. apologized Saturday for “miscommuni­cation” with states over the number of doses to be delivered in the early stages of distributi­on.

Of the more than 272,000 shots of the Pfizer vaccine that had been given as of Saturday morning, U. S. health officials said they had seen six cases of severe allergic reaction. One of the half- dozen people had a history of vaccinatio­n reactions, they said.

In a potential complicati­on, England’s chief medical officer, Chris Whitty, said Saturday the U. K. had informed the World Health Organizati­on that officials believe a new variant of the coronaviru­s can spread more rapidly. Britain’s health secretary said this week that the new variant was believed to be linked to the rapid surge of COVID-19 cases in south and southeaste­rn England.

 ?? THERESA PIROZZI ?? This photo shows Theresa Pirozzi’s parents, Jerry and Shirley Pirozzi, an 85-year-old couple from Southern California, in Oak Park. They are both in the same hospital with COVID-19 and had to wait for a couple days to get a bed.
THERESA PIROZZI This photo shows Theresa Pirozzi’s parents, Jerry and Shirley Pirozzi, an 85-year-old couple from Southern California, in Oak Park. They are both in the same hospital with COVID-19 and had to wait for a couple days to get a bed.

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