Los Angeles County ambulances told not to transport patients with low chance of survival
As hospitals across Los Angeles County reach capacity, ambulance crews have been told not to transport patients with little chance of survival.
The Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency issued the order Monday with immediate effect, saying "adult patients in blunt traumatic and nontraumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest" shall not be brought to the hospital if they cannot be resuscitated in the field due to the "severe impact" of the coronavirus pandemic on the health care system. That includes victims of heart attacks, gunshot wounds, stabbings and car crashes.
Los Angeles County has the highest tally of confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths of any county in the United States, according to a real-time count kept by Johns Hopkins University.
Data posted by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health shows there were 7,697 people who remained hospitalized with COVID-19 on Monday.