Over the past two weeks, COVID-19 cases in the United States have risen an alarming 145%. The spread of the delta variant is causing a dangerous spike in cases – including among people who are vaccinated – and sparked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to call for people to once again wear masks indoors. And hospitals are once again concerned about hitting capacity in their COVID-19 units.
In this week’s episode, in partnership with Kaiser Health News, we follow one doctor as she dives into medical training on the front lines of the pandemic.
Living and working in the predominantly Latino agricultural hub of Fresno, California, Dr. Paloma Marin-Nevarez saw the disparities of the disease with her own eyes. Latinos in the United States are nearly three times as likely as White people to be hospitalized and more than twice as likely to die from COVID-19. Meanwhile, only 6% of doctors in California are Latino, compared with nearly 40% of the state’s population. Marin-Nevarez sees medicine as a way to try to heal inequity. “I wanted to go to a place where I was needed, first and foremost,” she said.
As the death toll and massive disparities of the pandemic mounted, reporter Jenny Gold asked Marin-Nevarez whether she felt like a hero. The doctor replied that she found herself frustrated with people who called health care workers “heroes” but then shirked their own responsibility to stop the spread of COVID-19.
She told Gold: “What if every single person had seen themselves as a hero and then said no to traveling during the holidays, or had said no to throwing a wedding during a pandemic, or had said no to having a party or to have a get-together, or to give something up? What if everyone had thought of themselves that way? And then said, ‘It is also my job to take care of others.’ ”
When we first aired this episode in February, the U.S. death toll from COVID-19 had reached 500,000 people. As we broadcast it this week, over 600,000 Americans have died.
Listen to the episode: Into the COVID ICU
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