Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Coronaviru­s death toll passes the 15,000 mark

Yolo County continues to see falling number of cases

- By The Associated Press

California’s death count from the coronaviru­s surpassed 15,000 on Sunday even as the state saw widespread improvemen­t in infection levels.

A tally by Johns Hopkins University put California’s death toll at 15,026, the fourth highest in the country. New York has suffered by far the most deaths — 33,081 — followed New Jersey, which has about half as many. Texas is third.

California, which is the nation’s most populous state, has the most confirmed virus cases in the U.S. with about 775,000, but key indicators have fallen dramatical­ly since a spike that started after Memorial Day weekend prompted statewide shutdowns of businesses.

The state’s infection rate has fallen to 3% in the last week, the lowest level since the first days of the pandemic.

Hospitaliz­ations have dropped below 2,700, the lowest since early April, and the number of patients in the intensive care unit has dropped below 850. Falling ICU counts should help lower the death rate since those patients are the most likely to succumb to the virus.

In Yolo County, there were 2,747 cases reported as a of Sunday evening, which was eight more than were reported on Saturday. There have also been 54 deaths, which was unchanged from Saturday, but one more than reported Friday. The countywide infection rate, however, has now fallen to 4.90%.

If that 4.90% can continue dropping and remain down, then businesses and restaurant­s could reopen by October.

Woodland is also seeing fewer infections. As of Sunday night, there were 1,162 cases reported, or two more than on Saturday. There were also 29 deaths from within Woodland, a number which remains unchanged over the past several days.

Senior care facilities, which were an earlier source of infections, have also stabilized. As of Sunday night there were 148, seniors who have contracted the disease countywide with 27 deaths. Yolo County reports that of those 148 cases, 77 are residents and 71 are staff.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some — especially older adults and people with existing health problems — it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.

With figures falling, California last month instituted a new four-tier system for counties to reopen more businesses and activities. Most counties — including Los Angeles, the state’s most populous with 10 million residents— remain in the most restrictiv­e level but some could move to a lower level when the state updates the ratings on Tuesday.

A notable exception is San Diego County, the state’s second-largest, which has seen a spike of cases fueled partly by an outbreak among San Diego State University students. It is poised to return to the most restrictiv­e level.

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