KEY POINTS
  • Around the U.S., hospitals are reaching their limits. There are 104,600 Covid-19 patients in the nation's hospitals, the most at any point during the pandemic.
  • Some health-care facilities, especially those in rural areas, have struggled to recruit and retain nurses even before the pandemic, experts say.
  • Now, exhausted health-care workers continue to treat sick patients months into the pandemic, even those who don't believe the virus exists, some nurses say.

In this article

A medical staff member Gabriel Cervera Rodriguez closes his eyes while taking a short break in the COVID-19 intensive care unit (ICU) at the United Memorial Medical Center on December 2, 2020 in Houston, Texas.

Tayler Oakes, a 27-year-old travel nurse from Tennessee treating Covid-19 patients at a small Navajo Nation health-care facility, is exhausted.

Working six days a week, Oakes has lived in a motel in a rural part of Arizona since July, assisting patients at a critical access hospital that treats people in dire need of care. Despite the endless hours she and her co-workers have put in, the number of Covid-19 patients is still rising rapidly, she said.

In this article