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Doctor Alejandra Antonio peers out from the triage consultation area to check whether any patients are waiting, at a COVID-19 hospital in Military Camp 1, in Naucalpan, Mexico State, part of the Mexico City metropolitan area, Tuesday, June 23, 2020. Mexico City, the sprawling capital of 9 million residents and the epicenter of the country’s epidemic with nearly a quarter of Mexico’s confirmed infections, has nine times more intensive care beds now than it started the year with. But people are dying at a worrisome rate. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

Doctor Alejandra Antonio peers out from the triage consultation area to check whether any patients are waiting, at a COVID-19 hospital in Military Camp 1, in Naucalpan, Mexico State, part of the Mexico City metropolitan area, Tuesday, June 23, 2020. Mexico City, the sprawling capital of 9 million residents and the epicenter of the country’s epidemic with nearly a quarter of Mexico’s confirmed infections, has nine times more intensive care beds now than it started the year with. But people are dying at a worrisome rate. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

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