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NM avoided rationing of care through worst of surge


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Registered nurses Mandy Cordova, left, and Mikayla Salazar, right, help Dr. James Gonzales put a breathing tube for a respirator into a COVID-19 patient at Guadalupe County Hospital in Santa Rosa on Dec. 11. The patient, an inmate at Guadalupe County Corrections, was later transferred to a hospital in Albuquerque. (Eddie Moore/Albuquerque Journal)
The deadliest seven-day stretch of the pandemic in New Mexico started 2½ weeks before Christmas.
As many New Mexicans turned to online gift buying and planned scaled-down holiday celebrations, hospitals in the state were bursting at the seams and dealing with the horrific realities of the pandemic.
A staggering 297 New Mexicans succumbed to the virus from Dec. 7 to Dec. 13, among them Jerry Hernandez, a 68-year-old retired truck driver from Albuquerque who died at Presbyterian Rust Medical Center a week after testing positive. ....

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State, FDA remain wary of COVID-19 'cure'


Nathan Butters, a 42-year-old lawyer-turned-medical student at the University of New Mexico, knows he’s putting some part of himself — his reputation, his possible future as a doctor — at risk.
But he can’t help it, he said: If what he believes about a possible COVID-19 treatment turns out to be true, he would be helping others by advocating for its use.
“I’ve been trying since July to get people in New Mexico” — from Governor’s Office officials to Human Services Secretary David Scrase — “to pay attention to this treatment, this drug,” Butters said. “People just tell me, ‘Oh, there aren’t enough studies; there are no control groups.’ There’s a lot of resistance because it hasn’t been blessed by the FDA, the CDC, the NIH — by the powers that be.” ....

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