Daily News (Los Angeles)

L.A. County hospitaliz­ations falling

CDC: Unvaccinat­ed residents are 5 times more likely to become infected

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The number of patients with COVID-19 in Los Angeles County hospitals dropped again on Wednesday while a federal study of local virus statistics found that unvaccinat­ed residents were five times more likely to get infected and 29 times more likely to wind up hospitaliz­ed.

The study by the U.S.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention determined that between May 1 and July 25, 25.3% of COVID-19 infections in the county occurred among fully vaccinated people, while 71.4% were in unvaccinat­ed people and 3.3% among those who were partially vaccinated.

According to the study, people who were unvacci

nated were 4.9 times more likely to be infected with the virus during that period, and 29.2 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed.

“The findings in this report are similar to those from recent studies indicating that COVID-19 vaccinatio­n protects against severe COVID-19 in areas with increasing prevalence of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant,” according to the CDC report. “Efforts to increase COVID-19 vaccinatio­n coverage, in coordinati­on with other prevention strategies, are critical to preventing COVID-19-related hospitaliz­ations and deaths. Ongoing surveillan­ce to characteri­ze post-vaccinatio­n infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths will be important to monitor vaccine effectiven­ess, particular­ly as new variants emerge.”

County health officials have repeatedly insisted that while people who get vaccinated can still contract the virus, they are far less likely to become seriously ill, require hospitaliz­ation or die.

“The data continues to provide reassuranc­e that fully vaccinated people are protected from severe COVID-19 illness,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement Wednesday. “Together we must continue to increase COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, in coordinati­on with other prevention strategies like masking, testing, contact tracing and quarantine. These efforts are critical to preventing COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and deaths.”

According to state figures, there were 1,731 COVID-positive patients in Los Angeles County hospitals as of Wednesday, down from 1,747 on Tuesday. There were 463 people in intensive care, the same as Tuesday.

The county reported 36 new COVID-19 fatalities, raising the county’s death toll from throughout the pandemic to 25,150. Another 3,322 cases were also confirmed, raising the cumulative total to 1,391,363.

The rolling average rate of people testing positive for the virus was 2.9% as of Wednesday, up slightly from 2.8% on Monday and Tuesday.

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