Hospitals stretched thin in Wisconsin, Michigan
In Wisconsin, only 4% of ICU beds are available.
"This is getting really scary," Dr. Jamie Hess, an emergency physician at the University of Wisconsin, told ABC News.
"We're really reaching a crisis point where we have more patients to take care of then we have beds in the hospital or staff to care for them," Hess said.
Michigan has been struggling through a similar surge for nearly three months, with the state reporting more than 6,500 new cases each day. On average, more than 500 patients are being admitted to hospitals each day.
"Where we are right now feels a lot like the first surge back in March of 2020," Erin Dicks, a nurse manager at MICU Henry Ford Hospital, told ABC News. "We don't have enough beds to be able to manage this."
Dicks said so many patients are young.
"I think one of the biggest frustrating pieces for my staff is that they look at this as, this is preventable -- people don't have to die here," Dicks said.
-ABC News' Arielle Mitropoulos