Daily Breeze (Torrance)

As COVID-19 health emergency ends, county officials are still urging caution

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With Los Angeles County's local emergency declaratio­ns on COVID-19 set to end on the final day of March, the county health department Thursday reminded residents the virus remains a concern — urging people to continue taking precaution­s.

“We are acutely aware that the pandemic is not over and that there are people within our county who continue to feel the hardships of COVID-19 every day,” Barbara Ferrer, director of the L.A. County Department of Public Health, said in a statement Thursday.

“As we enter this new phase, residents of Los Angeles County are reminded that there is no change in their access to lifesaving tools,” she said. “We will work with federal and state officials in the coming weeks and months to make sure this remains true. Vaccines, therapeuti­cs and testing are the resources that got us to this place where there is less severe illness from COVID, and this is where we hope to stay.”

Ferrer's comments came two days after the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s agreed to end the county's local COVID-19 emergency declaratio­ns at the end of March, while also warning that the move does not mean the virus no longer poses a threat.

“We don't want to abandon those tools that got us to this place,” Supervisor Hilda Solis said, “but with effective vaccines and testing abundantly available we can move on to the next phase of our response to COVID-19.”

The board voted unanimousl­y in support of Supervisor Janice Hahn's motion, which will end the proclamati­on of a local emergency and the proclamati­on of a local health emergency on March 31. The board's decision came on the day the statewide COVID-19 emergency ended.

Long Beach also has ended it's health emergency. Pasadena's emergency is set to end Sunday.

Hahn noted in her motion that the emergency declaratio­ns “saved lives and protected the health of county residents.” But it also said that, thanks to the widespread availabili­ty of vaccines, therapeuti­cs and other measures to combat virus spread and illness, “hospitaliz­ations and deaths due to COVID-19 have dramatical­ly reduced.”

The health department highlighte­d various data Thursday regarding the effectiven­ess of the updated bivalent booster. Among the points were:

• For the 30-day period ending Feb. 14, vaccinated people in L.A. County who had not received the bivalent booster were 1.5 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed than were people who received the updated bivalent booster.

• Unvaccinat­ed people were five times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed compared to people who had received the bivalent booster.

• For the 30-day period ending Feb. 7, unvaccinat­ed residents were more than six times more likely to die compared to people who had received the bivalent booster, while people who had been vaccinated but did not receive the updated bivalent booster were more than 1.5 times more likely to die from a COVID-19 infection than those who were boosted.

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