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already. geez, louise! reporter: nationwide cases are 60% lower than at january s peak, but weekly cases among children are still over 100,000 and are about 400% higher than this time last year. i am fully confident tha wi be e kid s n school, particularly in schools that have high vaccination rates my worry is that we re not quite there yet. reporter: pandemic fatigue and frustration isn t just impacting schools. it s hitting hospitals, too. every day i read about reports in which my staff are either verbally or physically abused. reporter: at this hospital in georgia, dr. gregory evans says with each wave of covid, there s also a flood of aggression. what are those verbal attacks look like? accusations why we aren t giving certain medications that they may have researched on the internet. reporter: dr. lily henson says when hospitals are full of patients that don t trust science, it s a dagger to moral. we get this threat that says,
have an audio recording of that call, and they re investigating. norah. o donnell: nancy cordes at the white house, thank you. well, tonight, we re learning more about how a michigan couple reacted in the moments after their son, ethan crumbley, allegedly shot and killed four students at oxford high school in november. at a hearing today that will determine whether there s enough evidence to put jennifer and james crumbley on trial for involuntary manslaughter, prosecutors played james crumbley s call to 911 to report a missing gun. o donnell: a work supervisor testified that soon after the shooting, jennifer crumbley sent a text message saying, i need my job. please don t judge me for what my son did. the crumbleys are accused of making a gun accessible to their
they may have researched on the internet. reporter: how has social media and the spread of misinformation about covid played into everything that you re going through? you re laughing? yeah, it s a sad laugh. you know, social media is a blessing and it s a curse. day in and day out, they ask for these therapies that have not been shown to be effective. reporter: dr. henson says when hospitals are full of patients that don t trust science, it s a dagger to moral. we get this threat that says , you know, if my loved oneidize, that s your fault. that s really heartbreaking. reporter: what about people who have large followings who are promoting the spread of misinformation? what would you say to them? i would say that they have on their conscience the lives of these patients. reporter: elise preston, cbs news, stockbridge, georgia. cordes: still ahead on the cbs weekend news, a good samaritan rescues two children from a burning apartment and all of it is caught on came
the white house when there was that sort of change where we could all take off our masks. i remember for the first time seeing white house aides, their full faces for the first time because they had been in office for a few months and no one had seen the full faces of some of the press aides. they were excited. then when we had to put our masks back on, you felt the sadness of that. and now the president is having to deal with this is spiking at a moment where his party is fighting. him and joe manchin cannot get on the same page to give relief to the american people to provide some of the badly needed things that people need. one other thing, the president talked about misinformation. of course he can ramp up testing, encourage people to get vaccinated, but the number one thing that it s continuing to keep us in this cycle of waves and variants are that there americans who simply don t trust science. you are now ready to boo the former president because he s
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