“The hospital is intentionally hurting me financially for speaking out, and I’m not permitted to work,” Gilman told The Washington Post on Thursday. The hospital, though, insists that Gilman hasn’t been fired and in fact is scheduled to return to the ER this weekend. In June, Gilman, his fiancee and two children moved to Yuma to work at the hospital there. Back then, the Arizona Department of Health Services reported 90 percent of the state’s ICU beds were in use. As of Friday, the state’s department of health services reported Yuma County had the highest rate of cases per 100,000 in the state.
Source: Washington Post December 11, 2020 12:31 UTC