Lodi News-Sentinel

Thanksgivi­ng threatens new spread as state nears 1M COVID cases

- By Rong-Gong Lin II, Luke Money and Iris Lee

California is approachin­g 1 million coronaviru­s cases at a crucial moment in the pandemic.

After months of declining infections amid stricter reopening rules, the virus is again spreading, with Los Angeles County and Silicon Valley seeing new surges that are sparking alarm among health officials.

The concerns are heightened by the upcoming Thanksgivi­ng holiday. After months of restrictio­ns, officials fear many people will make exceptions, attending gatherings that will further increase infections as California begins the holiday season.

China showed just how destructiv­e and deadly large family meals can be in a pandemic, when celebratio­ns for the Lunar New Year — that country’s version of Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas — and related cross-country travel ended up seeding the highly contagious virus worldwide, fueling the worst global pandemic in more than a century.

The most recent spike has been attributed in part to social gatherings — including victory celebratio­ns related to the Lakers and Dodgers. There are also concerns that the virus might have been spread more through celebratio­ns over Joe Biden’s presidenti­al win.

But Thanksgivi­ng brings a new level of peril.

The best way to ensure that family and friends stay safe is to limit celebratio­ns to members of your household only, experts say. And that goes for Christmas and other winter holidays too.

“Stop. Don’t do either. Really,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious diseases expert at the University of California, San Francisco. That includes saying no to flying home for the holidays, Rutherford said. “The basic advice is: Stay within your pods. Stay within your bubbles. Stay within your household.”

“If you listen to the (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), the main drivers nationwide — and I wouldn’t think that’s any different for California — are small gatherings,” Rutherford said. “That’s something that I think people are really quite concerned about in my world, especially if we’re starting to surge right now.”

California is entering another coronaviru­s wave, as much of the rest of the country has done. Health officials in Los Angeles County and Santa Clara County, Northern California’s most populous, said Monday it’s now clear they’ve entered a new surge, something that cannot be explained away by data reporting delays or a random bad couple of days.

On Monday night, California’s COVID-19 death tally surpassed 18,000, according to the Los Angeles Times’ California coronaviru­s tracker. That death toll is six times worse than the one estimated for the great 1906 earthquake that destroyed much of San Francisco. More than 982,000 coronaviru­s infections have been diagnosed in California.

Halloween parties may already be to blame for some of the spike in coronaviru­s infections. Weekly cases in California have nearly doubled over the past month; four weeks ago, more than 20,000 cases were reported in a week statewide, but in the last week, nearly 40,000 cases were reported for the seven-day period that ended Sunday, according to a Times analysis.

Still, California remains in better shape than other parts of the nation, a likely result of better-than-average mask use and the state’s slower reopening of the economy. The Golden State has the 38th highest per capita cumulative coronaviru­s case rate among the 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, with about 2,500 cases per 100,000 residents. By contrast, Wisconsin and Iowa have roughly double California’s case rate, and North Dakota has triple.

But a version of the nightmare scenarios seen in Europe and the U.S. Midwest, where hospitals are overwhelme­d, could easily happen in California if the state’s residents collective­ly shrug at the pandemic and dive into large communal Thanksgivi­ng feasts, with family and friends flying from around the country and spending half a day together indoors, giving hugs and taking off their masks.

Nationwide, 238,000 people in the U.S. have died from COVID-19, and more than 134,000 additional deaths are currently forecast to occur through the end of President Donald Trump’s term on Jan. 20, including about 10,000 in California, according to the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.

Harder-hit places “serve as a reminder that that can easily be our reality as well,” said Barbara Ferrer, the L.A. County director of public health. “When cases surged in New York City, and we all said, ‘Oh, you know, that’s not going to happen here.’ And then in July, we had an equally troubling surge in cases. It did happen here.”

The surge is being seen across California, according to The Times’ analysis. In the five-county Southern California region of L.A., Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties, weekly cases have doubled — from about 11,000 cases four weeks ago to about 22,000 in the last week. Weekly cases are up 70% in San Diego County, from about 1,800 to 3,100, over the same period.

Weekly cases are up 74% in the San Joaquin Valley; up 82% in the San Francisco Bay Area; and up 143% in the Sacramento area.

The weekly rate at which California’s coronaviru­s test results are turning up positive has also dramatical­ly increased in recent weeks, from 2.4% in mid-October to 4.1% for the most recent seven-day period.

Starting in late July, California had recorded 12 consecutiv­e weeks of declining hospitaliz­ations related to coronaviru­s infections. But that began to change last month, and in the last week, there were nearly 2,800 people on average hospitaliz­ed every day with COVID-19 infections, a 24% increase from four weeks ago.

Last week, the deaths of 308 California­ns from COVID-19 were reported, the lowest number since March. But an increase in cases and hospitaliz­ations will eventually lead to more deaths.

In Santa Clara County, the home to Silicon Valley, officials had been monitoring a slow increase in cases throughout October. Last week, there was a steep rise.

“It concerns all of us because it could mean that we’re in for a large surge that will be difficult to control,” said Dr. Sara Cody, the Santa Clara County health officer who was one of the chief architects of the nation’s first regional stay-at-home order. “When we see a surge in cases, it is almost always followed by a surge in hospitaliz­ations.”

Unlike Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, most Bay Area counties have enjoyed improved pandemic conditions and have advanced to less restrictiv­e tiers in the state’s reopening framework. Reopenings of businesses such as indoor gyms and indoor dining at restaurant­s may have to be reversed if case rates worsen.

“What we’re probably seeing with these increased numbers is people just letting their guard down,” Santa Clara County Supervisor Cindy Chavez said. She said she’s noticed that people are willing to keep their distance from strangers, but when seeing an old friend or family member, they embrace.

“This is a virus where 40% of people with infection have no symptoms,” Cody said, yet are infectious and can transmit the potentiall­y deadly virus to others.

 ?? GENARO MOLINA/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? People, most wearing masks, walk on the Santa Monica Pier in Santa Monica on Monday.
GENARO MOLINA/LOS ANGELES TIMES People, most wearing masks, walk on the Santa Monica Pier in Santa Monica on Monday.

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