Los Angeles Times

A perilous balancing act

Even as infection rates rise, L.A. County aims to reopen with strict safety regulation­s.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II, Colleen Shalby and Iris Lee

With businesses reopening and people beginning to get back to old routines, Los Angeles County is entering a perilous phase of the fight against the coronaviru­s: trying to boost the battered economy without sparking new outbreaks.

One concerning sign is that the coronaviru­s transmissi­on rate in Los Angeles County — the California epicenter of COVID-19, with more than 2,600 deaths — appears to be climbing again. The increase was reported after the county allowed many retail stores, restaurant­s and churches to reopen with social distancing rules and as more people left their homes for parks, beaches and hiking trails.

Officials said it will take a few weeks to see whether the calculated rate of disease transmissi­on has actually increased, causing hospitals to see more coronaviru­s patients. But authoritie­s also say it is still possible to strike the right balance between reopening society and strict safety rules.

“This is not an impossible task,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Monday. “This is entirely possible: to be able to reopen and do it in a manner that continues to slow the spread .... It’s essential that we make progress on our reopening.”

At its worst, the county’s “effective transmissi­on rate”

of the coronaviru­s was quite high — 3 to 3½ — meaning one infected person on average transmitte­d the virus to 3 or 3½ other people. That high point came in early March, before Gov. Gavin Newsom implemente­d California’s stay-at-home order March 19.

Eventually, the stay-athome order worked, and the effective transmissi­on rate fell to 1, and then even a bit below 1. That means that, on average, each infected person was transmitti­ng the virus to less than one other person.

But on Friday, Dr. Christina Ghaly, director of health services for L.A. County, said the effective transmissi­on rate had now risen above 1 and was gaining ground.

“If transmissi­on has indeed increased,” she added, “then the model predicts that we will have a continued increase in hospital patient volume over the next two to four weeks, and we would anticipate beginning to see that change happen over the coming one to two weeks.”

Weekly coronaviru­s deaths in L.A. County rose for the first time since midApril. There were 284 deaths reported for the seven-day period that ended Sunday, up 12% from the previous week’s 254.

Hospitaliz­ations for COVID-19 in Los Angeles County did not significan­tly decline last week compared with the previous week. That’s the first time that has happened since hospitaliz­ations were at their peak in the last week of April. There were an average of 2,010 hospitaliz­ed patients daily last week with confirmed or suspected coronaviru­s infections, down 0.1% from the previous week’s daily average of 2,012.

The number of new weekly confirmed cases is down, with 8,849 reported in the seven-day period that ended Sunday, compared with 9,967 the week before.

Ghaly said it was possible the number of intensive care beds could become inadequate in the next two to four weeks based on the number of available beds in daily surveys among the county’s public and private hospitals.

“We must all do everything we can to keep the [transmissi­on rate] from continuing to increase,” Ghaly said.

Los Angeles County has seen a disproport­ionate share of both coronaviru­s deaths and cases, which now top 64,000. That represents nearly half of the more than 133,000 cases in California, even though L.A. County is home to just one-quarter of the state’s population. The coronaviru­s toll has hit minority communitie­s particular­ly hard. Black, Latino and Pacific Islander residents of Los Angeles County are now twice as likely to have died from infection by the coronaviru­s, officials said.

While officials say the rising death toll is troubling, there are some optimistic signs about the COVID-19 fight.

Nursing home residents have made up almost half of the coronaviru­s deaths in Los Angeles County. But the number of new daily deaths among nursing home residents, while still high, has dramatical­ly come down in the last two weeks, Ferrer said Monday.

Ferrer credited the reduction with two changes: ramping up testing of residents and staff, regardless of if they have symptoms, and having everyone in the facility wear appropriat­e protective personal equipment, such as a surgical mask or an N95 respirator, depending on what’s appropriat­e.

“That was a big change … but it also introduced an extra layer of protection, and it has taken a while for us to see the impact of these changes,” Ferrer said.

Last month, The Times reported that L.A. County was struggling to get everyone tested at nursing homes in the county. L.A. County had instructed nursing homes with no cases that they could skip testing staffers and test only 10% of residents weekly.

California health officials subsequent­ly issued new instructio­ns to all skilled nursing facilities to test everyone, a move that overruled the more lax testing allowed by L.A. County.

The county Board of Supervisor­s has voted to appoint an independen­t inspector general to look into the county’s oversight of nursing homes, including the health department’s slow testing.

L.A. County’s case rates are high because there has been a lot of testing in the nation’s most populous county, Ferrer said. She added that the overall rate of positive tests is shrinking — slightly fewer than 8% of people tested for the coronaviru­s have been positive, but in the last seven to 14 days, the rate has declined to about 5.5%, she said.

Los Angeles County officials have defended their reopening strategy, which has been generally speedier than that of the Bay Area.

Supervisor Kathryn Barger noted at a news conference Monday that L.A. County has been a week behind nearby counties — San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura — in managing its reopening.

“Make no mistake: We are doing this in a very deliberate and cautious way, and actually had been one step behind the surroundin­g counties,” Barger said.

More openings could come soon. State officials have paved the way for most California counties outside the Bay Area, including Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura, to decide to reopen movie theaters and gyms as early as Friday.

The latest rise in cases cannot be linked to the thousands who have taken to the streets in the last week to protest the police killing of George Floyd and racial inequality. The incubation period for the virus can be up to 14 days, so numbers currently reported generally reflect actions from previous weeks, officials have said.

That’s not to say that activities at the protests won’t affect the case count in the coming days.

Officials have continued to commend peaceful protesters for exercising their 1st Amendment rights while also reminding them to remain cautious.

Ferrer on Monday said the risk of exposure at protests is the same as other crowded settings where there may be people not wearing masks, including indoor malls, restaurant­s and the beach. In such instances, government disease investigat­ors won’t know that people were in such an environmen­t, which raises the risk of exposure to the virus.

“Nobody knows you were there,” she said. “No one will call you.”

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? A WORKER sprays a “cold fog” of ethanol and hydrogen peroxide in a Studio City hotel room. A sticker on the door indicates that the room has been disinfecte­d.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times A WORKER sprays a “cold fog” of ethanol and hydrogen peroxide in a Studio City hotel room. A sticker on the door indicates that the room has been disinfecte­d.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? AMONG THE NEW safety features to protect guests and workers at L.A. County hotels is the installati­on of plexiglass at check-in desks, bars and gift shops.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times AMONG THE NEW safety features to protect guests and workers at L.A. County hotels is the installati­on of plexiglass at check-in desks, bars and gift shops.

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