Daily Democrat (Woodland)

California could see 89% jump in hospital stays

- By Fiona Kelliher f kelliher@bayareanew­sgroup.com

California could see an 89% increase in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations by the next month if coronaviru­s infections continue apace, a top state health official warned Friday.

Short-term forecasts indicate that hospitaliz­ations could skyrocket from the 2,578 patients now hospitaliz­ed to 4,864 by this time in October, said California

Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly during a Friday press briefing — a signal that California­ns should stay vigilant as more parts of the economy open up.

“As we see these trend lines, which have been coming down and flattening, look like they’re coming up … we want to sound that bell for all of you,” Ghaly said. “We want to see us respond as a state to those slight increases.”

Although Ghaly praised the state’s “significan­t progress” in infection and hospitaliz­ation rates since midJuly — when a peak 7,170 COVID-19 patients were hospitaliz­ed — he flagged early signs that the state’s progress has begun to shift. Starting in mid-September, Ghaly said, infection rates have risen slightly across the state, while coronaviru­s-related emergency room visits have also climbed.

Although overall lower case rates have allowed many counties to reopen businesses within Gov. Gavin Newsom’s reopening system, the virus’ reproducti­on number has surpassed 1.0 in some regions, Ghaly said. Twenty-five of California’s 58 counties remain in the red or “widespread” tier, with another 19, including most of the Bay Area, in the purple or “substantia­l” tier, allowing for movie theaters and restaurant­s to welcome customers indoors at limited capacity.

Yolo County remains in the “widespread” or most restrictiv­e tier. The county is reporting 2,789 COVID-19 cases, with seven new cases reported Friday.

So far, 55 people have died and 186 have been hospitaliz­ed.

Keeping case rates low means that the virus’ reproducti­ve value has less of a dramatic effect on potential hospitaliz­ations, Ghaly said — especially with the double whammy

“As we see these trend lines, which have been coming down and flattening, look like they’re coming up … we want to sound that bell for all of you. We want to see us respond as a state to those slight increases.”

of flu season looming. But with more cases overall, “you can see how quickly case rates go up and how quickly that creates additional pressure on our hospitals,” he added.

Statewide, however, there was little change in the seven-day average of new infections and fatalities reported as of Friday. Both figures remained lower than where they were two weeks ago and significan­tly below their respective peaks. The 3,274 new cases and 85 deaths reported by county health department­s Thursday kept each sevenday average about even — just over 3,500 cases and just below 84 deaths per day over the past week, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on.

Ghaly’s hospitaliz­ation projection, meanwhile, would put the state on par with its Aug. 19 hospitaliz­ations, when 4,890 people were hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 — more than 2,000 people fewer than the state’s peak a month earlier.

“As California­ns we’ve done a good job to avoid those situations, and we want to keep our guard up,” Ghaly said.

— Dr. Mark Ghaly, California Health and Human Services

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