Can you just go to r/nursing and read the 100x stories of nurses saying "I'm actually not an ICU nurse but my floor has been converted to an ICU floor" or "We have 4 nurses for 30 covid patients and I want to scream"?
Maybe go to your local hospital and ask then among their own nursing social circles? They're the people who would have first-hand understanding of how full the ICUs are.
I'm not saying I believe everything I read on Reddit, but I know r/nursing is a longtime subreddit of mostly medical people and has a history of being as such for a long time. If I wanted to know what the actual medical field is dealing with day to day, I think a community with a history of being where healthcare people talk about what they're dealing with day to day is a pretty good bet.
Case numbers! Case numbers! Hospital rates are NEARLY at capacity!!!!
Yeah that has been said over and over. Things are fine.
Go outside of the city, noone respects this stuff and hasn't the whole time, noone is dying more than usual.
Worry about cars and obesity if you want to make a difference.