Lodi News-Sentinel

Hospitals filling again as delta variant rages

- Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money

SAN FRANCISCO — Officials across California are sounding new alarms about a significan­t spike in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations amid a surge fueled by the delta variant of the coronaviru­s.

While the numbers are still well below the levels seen during the fall and winter — when some hospitals were pushed to their breaking points — the rise is still alarming for a health care system weary and worn thin after almost a year and a half on the pandemic’s front lines.

Many of the state’s most populous areas have seen their COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations double over the span of a few weeks.

And overall, California has seen its total number of hospitaliz­ed coronaviru­s-positive patients swell from 2,981 on July 25 to 5,973 as of Sunday.

In L.A. County, hospitaliz­ations have doubled in the last 15 days, from 745 on July 24 to 1,503 on Sunday — the region’s worst number since the waning days of the devastatin­g fall and winter surge.

Between July 27 and Thursday, hospitaliz­ations in Orange County jumped from 215 to 453 — more than doubling in just over a week.

The number of COVID-19 patients rose to 463 on Saturday, the worst since late February, before falling slightly to 453 on Sunday.

Elsewhere in Southern California, hospitaliz­ations shot up from 239 on July 26 to 484 on Sunday in San Diego County, and have also at least doubled over the last 15 days in Riverside, San Bernardino

and Ventura counties.

Across the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area, there were a combined 436 COVID-19 patients hospitaliz­ed on July 22. By Sunday, there were 881.

In Sacramento County, hospitaliz­ations doubled from 148 on July 24 to 315 on Sunday.

In Fresno County, the number of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients doubled from 100 on July 28 to 214 on Sunday.

According to a Los Angeles Times analysis, 14 California counties are reporting per capita rates of more than 20 COVID-19 hospitaliz­ed patients for every 100,000 residents — as bad as the rate of hospitaliz­ed flu patients during the peak of the flu season.

The hardest-hit counties are in and around the Central Valley, including Sacramento, Fresno, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Solano, Placer, Butte, Kings, Nevada, Yuba, Tuolumne and Amador counties, as well as Lake and Del Norte counties in Northern California.

Data continue to show that the vast majority of those getting infected by, and ultimately hospitaliz­ed with, COVID-19 are uninoculat­ed.

For the week of July 31, the average coronaviru­s case rate among unvaccinat­ed California­ns was 33 per 100,000 residents per day, nearly five times the comparable rate of vaccinated individual­s.

As of last week, the risk of being hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 in L.A. County was 19 times higher among those who are not fully vaccinated than it is for those who are, according to county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

And in Orange County, Supervisor Katrina Foley said Monday that 90% of COVID-19 patients who have been hospitaliz­ed have been unvaccinat­ed.

“Very few of us are going to get out [of the pandemic] without either getting COVID illness or getting vaccinated,” said Dr. Matthew Zahn, Orange County’s deputy health officer and a pediatric infectious disease expert. “And, clearly, getting vaccinated is the safer, healthier way for us to go.”

Over 90% of the county’s coronaviru­s cases that were later analyzed for genomic sequencing have been identified as being caused by the ultra-contagious delta variant, he added during a briefing Monday.

delta, he continued, “is the reason that we are seeing an increase in the numbers of cases overall.”

In a letter last week, Dr. Carl Schultz, emergency medical services director for the Orange County Health Care Agency, urged the region’s hospitals to take steps to reduce ambulance patient offload times — as well as the number of hours they’re spending on diversion, when ambulances are redirected to other medical facilities.

“This is not sustainabl­e,” he wrote in the letter Wednesday. “We have not witnessed increases in ambulance-related numbers of this magnitude since the worst days of the second surge in December of 2020 and January of 2021.”

As of several days ago, Orange County was reporting that it was taking 44 minutes to offload 90% of its ambulance patients into hospitals. Normally, it takes around 25 minutes to offload an ambulance patient.

The offload time, however, has improved more recently, and was around 32 minutes Sunday.

 ?? FRANCINE ORR/ LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? COVID-positive patient Jorge Hernandez, 64, does his lung exercise with his incentive spirometer in the COVID unit inside Little Company of Mary Medical Center on July 30 in Torrance.
FRANCINE ORR/ LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS COVID-positive patient Jorge Hernandez, 64, does his lung exercise with his incentive spirometer in the COVID unit inside Little Company of Mary Medical Center on July 30 in Torrance.

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