Not really. Hospital overload here is defined as people being unable to get healthcare because no hospital can take them. This news story covered Spanish hospital 'overload' at the time, which basically meant they converted some beds to ICU/COVID beds.
It discusses one of the hardest hit hospitals. However the absolute numbers were small and they never turned people away.
This sort of bed conversion is known to happen even in normal years, so it doesn't mean much by itself. Dramatic language can be misleading. Unfortunately it is standard for health officials to describe hospitals as "overloaded" or "at breaking point" simply due to seasonal flu outbreaks, as in these articles from 2017:
In Madrid many people were turned away from hospitals. I know personally people that could not get into the hospital with a double pneumonia and were told to call an ambulance if their oxygen levels dropped. Ambulances took 4-6 hours to respond, instead of minutes. In regular times a double pneumonia 100% lands you at the hospital.
Not a direct acquaintance, but a friend of my sister was two days siting in the hall of the Gregorio MaraƱon until they could transfer him to IFEMA. Almost no supply of food during these two days, and he was lucky to have a seat, many people lying on the floor.
They found many bodies of people dead by COVID-19 at home. They found some bodies on the streets.
I don't get how can you pretend that many hospitals / regions were "overload".
Spain had similar problems to Italy early on in the outbreak where they shut down large chunks of hospital capacity by insisting doctors and nurses self-isolated, although it's now known that this was actively harmful: the virus is virulent and would have infected them sooner or later anyway, and the ones who weren't already elderly or sick wouldn't have been badly affected.
It's a debatable question whether this shutdown of hospitals was due to the virus, or due to the over-reaction to it. Other places where the virus started later didn't do this to the same extent (although the UK did and is still doing so!), and they saw less serious problems.
As for "many bodies of people dead at home/on the streets", can you show me reports of people dropping dead of COVID on the streets? I never heard that, it seems it hasn't happened elsewhere and sounds suspect.
Remember that basically all reports about people dying "of" COVID are garbage. The average age of death when testing positive is over the average life expectancy in most places (maybe all, I haven't checked). Almost all such reports are of deaths that were naturally happening anyway due to age or other serious health conditions, and COVID was just co-present at time of death - maybe it pushed them over by a little bit, but probably only by months. Correlation/causation mixups are a huge problem with COVID datasets.
https://english.elpais.com/society/2020-04-07/spains-intensi...
It discusses one of the hardest hit hospitals. However the absolute numbers were small and they never turned people away.
This sort of bed conversion is known to happen even in normal years, so it doesn't mean much by itself. Dramatic language can be misleading. Unfortunately it is standard for health officials to describe hospitals as "overloaded" or "at breaking point" simply due to seasonal flu outbreaks, as in these articles from 2017:
https://www.thelocal.fr/20170111/french-hospitals-stretched-...
https://www.euronews.com/2017/01/12/struggling-to-care-hospi...