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In California, a Mix of Support and Resistance to New Vaccine Rules
Some of California’s staunchest vaccine resisters are state employees and health care workers, all of whom will be required to get vaccinated or undergo testing starting next month.
Waiting to receive the Moderna vaccine in Santa Ana, Calif., last month. About 52 percent of the state’s population is fully vaccinated.Credit.Jae C. Hong/Associated Press
July 27, 2021
SACRAMENTO Gabriel Montoya, an emergency medical technician, watched in horror as gasping patients overwhelmed the intensive care unit at Kaiser Permanente Downey Medical Center in southeastern Los Angeles County late last year. Eight out of 10 admissions were infected with Covid-19 at one point.
Fire Officials Use Explosive Display To Warn Against The Danger Of Fireworks In Santa Clarita
On Wednesday, officials from the Los Angeles County Fire Department (LACoFD), the Sheriff’s Department and the City of Santa Clarita held a demonstration to warn residents against using any fireworks this Independence Day.
Using a pyrotechnic display, along with several speeches by community leaders, officials from the Fire Department, Sheriff’s Department and City Council warned Santa Clarita against using fireworks on the 4th of July.
“Please remember that all fireworks are illegal in the city of Santa Clarita, including those that are labeled ‘safe and sane,’” said Santa Clarita Mayor Bill Miranda. “Today we will provide reminders of the dangers of illegal firework use, followed by a pyrotechnic demonstration from the Los Angeles County Fire Department, to encourage everyone to leave fireworks displays to the professionals.”
Margarita Villacreces, 61, is terminally ill with stage 4 colon cancer. The Chatsworth mother had a final wish of wanting to see her youngest daughter, Cindy, get married so hospital staff helped make it possible.
Felipe Posada
He works six to seven days a week, but when he goes home for dinner with his family, Thomas Yadegar, MD, takes a few minutes to gather himself before going inside. Sometimes he breaks down. The 20 physicians he leads at the ICU at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center in L.A. and West Hills Hospital & Medical Center confide in him that they too “stop on their drive home and just cry,” he says. They all have nightmares. “I don’t see how any human who has gone through and witnessed what we have could not be changed dramatically and to the core,” he says. He hasn’t had a second to prepare for how over 14 months of watching COVID-19 patients die will affect him going forward.