Daily News (Los Angeles)

PANDEMIC RECAP

Three years after being shut down, people still are getting sick from COVID-19, including Gov. Gavin Newsom who tested positive this week.

- By KURT SNIBBE

Over the past three years, California has had drought, massive fires, the highest gas prices in its history, raging winter storms and like the rest of the world, the coronaviru­s pandemic.

California led the nation in COVID-19 cases and deaths.

On the bright, side the state’s death rate per 100,000 (254) is lower than most of the other highly-populated states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The numbers are becoming politicize­d as Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office released a statement Feb. 28, “California’s death rate is the lowest amongst large states. If California had Texas’ death rate, 27,000 more people would have died here. If California had Florida’s rate, that figure jumps to approximat­ely 56,000 more deaths.”

California’s death rate is about the same as Mexico, Spain and France, but not as low as Panama, Germany and Ecuador, which is close to 200 per 100,000.

Vietnam had about as many cases as California and its death rate is 44.37 per 100,000 people.

The governor’s note touches on economics coming out of the pandemic saying, “Since February 2021, California has created 1,628,300 new jobs – over 16% of the nation’s jobs, by far more than any other state. By comparison, Texas created 1,133,200 jobs (11.3% of the nation’s) and Florida created 787,600 jobs (7.9% of the nation’s) in that same time frame.”

The statement does not mention California’s 40 million population is larger than Texas by 10 million people and nearly twice as many as Florida’s 22 million people.

California’s unemployme­nt rate was higher during the pandemic as well. In January 2022, California’s unemployme­nt rate was 5.8%, Texas 4.8% and Florida 3.5%.

In the spring of 2020, all three states hit historical highs for unemployme­nt. California was highest with 16.8%, Florida was 14.1% and Texas was 12.8% .

COVID-19 still is an issue as the state averaged more than 2,000 new cases a day in the first week of March and the state had 2,336 patients hospitaliz­ed for the virus Monday. At its peak in January 2021, more than 21,000 people were hospitaliz­ed in California.

Recent transmissi­on in California

This map shows the percentage change in level of transmissi­on compared to the previous seven-day period. The map is as of Feb. 23 through March 1.

No more tiers

Early in the pandemic, the state had a four-color metric and enacted shutdowns when areas were in the purple (widespread) tier and red (substantia­l) tier. If the state’s four-color tier system still was in place, its 6.9 new cases per 100,000 and 6.5% test positivity rate as of Tuesday would be in red.

• California’s COVID-19 State of Emergency was declared officially over Feb. 28.

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