He spoke to ABC7 news reporter Kate Larsen Tuesday night about his experience and what he wants everyone to know and understand.
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"It's just been overwhelming," said Dr. Robert Rodriguez, who's been an ER doctor for 25 years.
He says the past week in Brownsville has been the hardest of his career.
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"I've been surprised by the sheer number and the acuity of the patients here," he said.
Rodriguez works at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. In San Francisco County, 56 people have died from COVID-19.
Brownsville, located on the U.S.-Mexico border, is in Cameron County, which has half the population of San Francisco. But according to Johns Hopkins University, they have had nearly five times as many COVID-19 deaths - 272 people.
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"There's typically at least one death a day, if not more," he said.
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And that's just at Brownsville's Valley Baptist Hospital, where Rodriguez has been volunteering in one of four ICU's they've created for the pandemic.
"They wind up on ventilators, and maximum support," he said. "We're trying everything, but these patients are extremely, extremely sick."
Rodriguez grew up in Brownsville, where he says there are only six critical care physicians.
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"They've been just working non-stop," he said. "They're exhausted. There's not a deep bench of physicians like there is in the Bay Area."
Cameron County is 90% Latino, a community that has also been hit hard by the pandemic in California.
"Everybody is wearing masks here," said Rodriguez. "The spread is not because people aren't being responsible. I think it's largely due to socioeconomic issues in terms of housing."
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Last week, Larsen spoke to Rodriguez about a UCSF study he led on physician stress levels during the pandemic, which were already high. Now, Rodriguez says he's concerned about his own health and bringing the virus back home to his family when he returns to the Bay Area later this week.
He went on to say, "It's been very stressful."
Rodriguez says he is worried about a big surge hitting San Francisco and Bay Area hospitals. "I think it's coming. Really, in the end, we need a vaccine to prevent it."
But in the meantime, he says, "the best way you can take care of front line providers and everybody else here in the hospital is by taking care of yourself and being socially responsible, wearing masks."
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