- medical care for veterans, The COVID-19 wave in California shows no signs of leveling off after it laid siege to hospitals, emergency services and morgues this week, the state's top health official says. California hospitals are warning against post-holiday operations by the California Health Department's Medical Providers of Veterans.
According to published data from the US Department of Health and Human Services, more than 2,000 confirmed or suspected COVID-19 patients are currently hospitalized in California, according to News, an information service that helps veterans, their families and others with information and services to help others. The news also ranks the state's 10 hospitals with the highest patient numbers and the worst conditions. This is a list of hospitals across California, grouped by county and sorted by hospital name, with a link to their website for more information on the status and status of their respective hospitals in the current crisis. These are hospitals across California, sorted by district and by hospital name.
Starting in Southern California's northernmost county, Ventura, and continuing south to San Diego, it's Kaiser Permanente, followed by Kaiser affiliated hospitals in Los Angeles County, San Bernardino County and Santa Clara County. Southern California is the largest Kaiser hospital in California (N.Y., with a total of 1,826,000 patients in 2013), after Kaiser Health System and Kaiser Medical Center, two Kaiser subsidiaries.
COVID-19 activity increased, the health ministry said, with an outbreak at Sunnybank Retirement Home in Oliver. Southern California Hospitals is dedicated to providing high quality care to residents of the communities of Santa Clara, San Bernardino and San Diego in west Los Angeles. SouthernCalifornia Healthcare System has three hospitals, including Kaiser Permanente, Kaiser Medical Center and Culver City Community Hospital, all in Hayward, Calif. Kaiser Health, an independent, nonprofit hospital based in Hayward, California, has been an integral part of our local community for 55 years.
Dr. D. Nageshwar Reddy is Chairman of the Department of Gastroenterology, Therapeutics and Endoscopy. He is fluent in English and is a member of the Board of Directors of the American College of Ophthalmology, American Academy of Surgeons, and is certified by the American Board for Ocularmology. Dr. Redy is a Fellow at the American College of Surgeons and has also worked for the US Army Corps of Engineers and the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Shusterman earned a BA in Human Development from Pacific Oaks College and a BBA in Biochemistry from the University of Wyoming. In 1975, he received his doctorate from the University of San Francisco and completed an internship at Highland Hospital in Alameda County, followed by a stint at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Oakland, California. Dr. Backer graduated from Berkeley University and returned to the University of San Francisco in 1976 as an associate professor of medicine. She received her Bachelor of Science in Medicine from California State University, San Diego, completed her residency in Internal Medicine at the California Institute of Technology in Los Angeles and her Master of Public Health from Stanford University.

Dr. Thompson earned a BS in mathematics from Metropolitan State University and completed his residency at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Oakland, California. In 1992 he received his BA in Music from the University of Santa Cruz and then an MD from St. George's University. In 2001, he completed an Internal Medicine degree at the University of California, San Francisco, and a Master of Public Health degree at the California Institute of Technology in Los Angeles. Dr. Thompson graduated from Berkeley University with a degree in English and a master's degree in public health.
Carol's father was born a cardiologist in Ongole, as was Carol's mother, who was one of the ophthalmologists Dr. Reddy treated there.
He received his doctorate from Tufts Medical School and completed a stint in family and community medicine at UCSF. In 2008 he completed his residency in cardiology at the University of California, San Francisco. He earned a PhD from Harvard University School of Medicine and received a fellowship in ophthalmology at Boston Children's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.
Dr. Schwilk earned a BA in biology with a focus on the environment from Occidental College and completed his residency at UC Davis, where he worked as a hospital physician. Dr. Hope earned her BA from Harvard University, completed a residency in the general practitioner's office with Moses Cone in 1998, and received her BBA from the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine in 2002. She completed her residency in family medicine at UCSF and her fellowship in pediatric cardiology at Stanford University Medical Center in 2009. He earned a bachelor's degree in psychology from Berkeley University and a doctorate from UCLA Medical School in 2010.

After completing an assistant degree in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of California, San Francisco and joining Tang's clinical staff in 2009, he joined a private practice group in Berkeley in 2010.