Antelope Valley Press

Deaths set record as new variant found

- By STEFANIE DAZIO and DON THOMPSON Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County surpassed 10,000 deaths from the Coronaviru­s Wednesday as California also hit a record high number of fatalities. The governor also announced the first detected case of the new and apparently more contagious variant of the Coronaviru­s in a San Diego man.

LA County Health Director Dr. Barbara Ferrer called the 10,056 deaths there a “terrible milestone.” She noted that more than 7,400 people remain hospitaliz­ed with Coronaviru­s in the county, with 20% of them in intensive care units.

“Most heartbreak­ing is that if we had done a better job of reducing transmissi­on of the virus, many of these deaths would not have happened,” Ferrer said.

The milestone came the same day Gov. Gavin Newsom announced an “unpreceden­ted” high of 432 reported deaths, a figure that was likely elevated due to a lag in reporting over the holidays. He said during a briefing with Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, that he had just learned that the new strain of the virus had been detected, the second reported case in the nation.

“I don’t think California­ns should think that this is odd; it’s to be expected,” Fauci said of the virus variant.

San Diego County officials said the infected man is a 30-year-old with no history of travel.

“The patient became symptomati­c on the 27th. He was tested yesterday and the new strain was detected early (Wednesday),” said Eric McDonald, the county’s medical director for epidemiolo­gy. Another person in the man’s household was being tested, he said.

The Colorado and California cases have triggered a host of questions about how the variant circulatin­g in England arrived in the U.S. and whether it is too late to stop it now, with top experts saying it is probably already spreading elsewhere in the United States. One San Diego supervisor said the detection means it is already circulatin­g there.

The case in California comes as the state is consumed by a growing pandemic crisis, including what Newsom called an “unpreceden­ted” 432 deaths reported Wednesday.

Hospitals are increasing­ly stretched by soaring infections that are expected to grow in the coming weeks. Southern California and the agricultur­al San Joaquin Valley have what is considered no intensive care capacity to treat patients suffering from the Coronaviru­s.

And state health officials remain worried about gatherings tied to New Year’s Eve.

But hope is on the horizon as vaccines roll out.

The statewide transmissi­on rate has also fallen to the point where one infected person is in turn infecting just one other individual, a developmen­t that Newsom called encouragin­g while warning that rates in central and Southern California remain much higher and the trend could reverse from holiday gatherings.

Despite the still-soaring infections, Newsom also released a plan for schools to resume in-person teaching next spring, starting with the youngest students and those who have struggled most with distance learning. He also promised $2 billion in state aid for Coronaviru­s testing, increased classroom ventilatio­n and personal protective equipment.

Many schools have already reopened and there have not been virus outbreaks “even in places with high rates of transmissi­on,” California School Board President Linda Darling-Hammond said.

Officials said schools in districts that have not already reopened with stringent plans in place would not reopen for in-person instructio­n until the overall transmissi­on rate declines in California.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the California Health and Human Services, gestures to a chart showing the impact of the stayat-home orders during an April news conference at the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services in Rancho Cordova.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the California Health and Human Services, gestures to a chart showing the impact of the stayat-home orders during an April news conference at the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services in Rancho Cordova.
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