It was afternoon in early April and I was only two-thirds of the way through my 12-hour shift. Between checking on how one patient was breathing and whether another was ready for discharge, I paused at the edge of an open walkway conjoining three diamond-shaped towers. Taking a deep breath behind my face shield and two layers of masks, I …
Empty Beds and Mounting Deaths: COVID-19 and U.S. Healthcare’s Systemic Failures
This article is part of the series: Dispatches from the pandemic