EyeQ Tech review EyeQ Tech EyeQ Tech tuyển dụng review công ty eyeq tech eyeq tech giờ ra sao EyeQ Tech review EyeQ Tech EyeQ Tech tuyển dụng crab exports crab exports crab exports crab export crab export crab export ca mau crabs crab industry crab farming crab farming crab farming crab farming crab farming crab farming crab farming crab farming crab farming
Lifestyle

More than 10,000 VA patients have died from COVID

1 of 6
Lead RN Brynn Chevalier, left, and RN Mel Arsenault push a gurney down the hall of 2-North, the COVID-19 floor at the West Roxbury VA Medical Center, as they transport a recently deceased patient out of the ward at West Roxbury VA Medical Center in Boston on Jan. 13, 2021.
Lead RN Brynn Chevalier, left, and RN Mel Arsenault push a gurney down the hall of 2-North, the COVID-19 floor at the West Roxbury VA Medical Center, as they transport a recently deceased patient out of the ward at West Roxbury VA Medical Center in Boston on Jan. 13, 2021. Boston Globe via Getty Images
Two Emergency Medical Team technicians prepare to transfer a COVID-19 patient on the Medical Intensive Care Unit floor, MICU, to the Brooklyn VA Hospital Center from the Veterans Affairs Medical Center April 24, 2020 in the Manhattan borough of New York City.
Two Emergency Medical Team technicians prepare to transfer a COVID-19 patient on the Medical Intensive Care Unit floor, MICU, to the Brooklyn VA Hospital Center from the Veterans Affairs Medical Center April 24, 2020 in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Getty Images
Advertisement
Nursing assistant Robert Cleckley, left, and RN Diana Flebotte use a plastic flag to cover the gurney of recently deceased patient Al Chapski before moving him off of the COVID-19 floor at West Roxbury VA Medical Center in Boston on Jan. 13, 2021.
Nursing assistant Robert Cleckley, left, and RN Diana Flebotte use a plastic flag to cover the gurney of recently deceased patient Al Chapski before moving him off of the COVID-19 floor at West Roxbury VA Medical Center in Boston on Jan. 13, 2021. Boston Globe via Getty Images
Pharmacist Serena Burgdorf administers a Covid-19 Moderna vaccine shot to Christine Griffin, Army Veteran, who has a spinal injury and is inpatient at the West Roxbury VA Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts on December 23, 2020.
Pharmacist Serena Burgdorf administers a Covid-19 Moderna vaccine shot to Christine Griffin, Army Veteran, who has a spinal injury and is inpatient at the West Roxbury VA Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts on December 23, 2020.AFP via Getty Images
Advertisement

More than 10,000 Veterans Affairs patients have died from complications related to coronavirus in less than 11 months, another grim milestone in the ongoing global pandemic.

As of Wednesday morning, VA officials had reported 10,059 deaths among veterans and other patients being tracked by department medical officials.

The department’s first death was reported on March 18, 2020. Since then, VA has averaged about 30 deaths a day connected to the virus. However, more than 60 percent of the deaths — 6,059 — have come since Nov. 1.

In addition to the patient deaths, at least 128 VA employees have also died from virus-related issues. About half of those have come since Nov. 1. VA cemeteries have hosted about 6,000 burials related to coronavirus deaths since last spring.

In a statement, VA officials said the recent spike in coronavirus cases and deaths is connected to the nationwide surge in cases which began last fall. At least 485,000 Americans have died from problems related to the virus, and more than 27.5 million Americans have contracted the illness.

“The United States, including the Department of Veterans Affairs, has experienced three surges in COVID-19 cases over the past year,” said Alan Greilsamer, spokesman for the Veterans Health Administration. “The overall rate of deaths in veterans in VA care for COVID-19 has declined since the beginning of the pandemic.”

VA has seen a sharp decrease in active coronavirus cases among patients over the last month.

In mid-January, department officials reported nearly 21,000 active cases spread out over more than 140 medical centers around the country. On Wednesday, that number was down to 6,411, the lowest figure since early November.

The number of patients hospitalized with severe virus symptoms has dropped by more than half in the last month, with fewer than 800 as of Tuesday.

Department officials have already administered about 1.8 million vaccine doses in the last two months, and expect that number to grow to more than 14 million (7 million individuals receiving the two-dose regimen) in coming months.

Last week, officials announced they were being given an extra 200,000 doses by the Department of Health and Human Services to meet VA needs. The department typically gets about 125,000 doses each week, to be distributed to sites across the country.

President Joe Biden has said he is optimistic that federal and state officials will have enough vaccine doses available for every American adult by the end of July.