As California virus cases fall, more people than ever dying
LOS ANGELES — As a hospice nurse, Antonio Espinoza worked to ease people’s passage into death. Just 36 years old, it seemed unlikely he soon would be on that journey.
But when the unpredictable coronavirus hit Espinoza, he spiraled from fever to chills to laboured breathing that sent him to a Southern California hospital, where he died Monday, a little more than a week after being admitted.
Espinoza is among the latest to succumb in what has become California’s deadliest surge. An average of 544 people died every day in the last week, and on Saturday the state reached the grim milestone of 40,000 deaths overall, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.
In barely a year since the virus was first detected in the state, 1 in 1,000 Californians have died from it.