In this July 2020 file photo, health care workers at St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, California, bring the remains of a victim of the Chinese Communist virus into an elevator
California experienced one of the worst weekends since the Communist Chinese virus (COVID-19) pandemic. On Monday (Jan. 11), the total number of people who died from the infection in California topped 30,000, and health officials warned that the current situation is still not the worst.
According to Johns Hopkins University, California’s death toll from the communist virus epidemic topped 30,000 after a “deadly weekend. In the less than a month between late December and Monday, the total number of deaths in California rose from 20,000 to 30,000.
Over the weekend, California officials reported a record of up to 1,163 deaths in two days. On Jan. 9, California broke the record for deaths reported in a single day, with 695 people dying from the CCHS virus that day. At the same time, hospitalizations have exploded and many hospitals have reached their limits.
Health officials warned that the current situation is still not the worst, and that the community is expected to be fully aware of the outbreak’s infection by later in January.
According to the Associated Press, the worst areas of the outbreak in California are the 15 counties in Southern California and the agricultural region of the San Joaquin Valley. These counties account for the majority of California’s population, including many low-income residents.
In Los Angeles County, the death toll from the epidemic exceeds 12,000, and there are more than 900,000 confirmed cases of the Chinese Communist virus.
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