Los Angeles Times

A PUSH TO PUT THE BRAKES ON VIRUS

Soon we’ll find out if restrictio­ns in recent weeks are slowing the spread.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Maura Dolan

Motorists drive up for COVID-19 testing at the Anaheim Convention Center. It’s a tense time for health officials waiting for indication­s that newly tightened restrictio­ns will slow the virus’ surge.

SAN FRANCISCO — The next two weeks are shaping up to be critical for California as officials wait to see if the sweeping restrictio­ns imposed in late June and July show any signs of slowing the rapid spread of coronaviru­s in communitie­s across the state.

This week was marked by a series of grim milestones as California shattered a one-day record for new coronaviru­s cases — more than 11,000 on Tuesday — as well as rising infection rates and growing numbers of hospitaliz­ations. Because the coronaviru­s can take weeks to incubate, much of the current surge is still tied to people exposed to the virus in June, as counties rapidly reopened the economy and many returned to old but now dangerous routines such as bar-hopping and attending parties and other social events.

The big question now is whether California­ns changed their behavior enough in July to reduce infection rates. Officials began raising alarms in the days before the July 4th holiday and over the last few weeks have closed bars, indoor dining, shopping malls, gyms and other retail establishm­ents in many areas.

“It’s kind of in everybody’s hands right now,” said Barbara Ferrer, director of public health for L.A.

County. “We don’t have a lot of time, though. At some point, you turn that corner where you’re actually expecting hospitals to provide way more care than is possible.”

On June 28, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered bars shut in L.A. County and several others, and a day later, Ferrer warned of “alarming increases in cases, positivity rates and hospitaliz­ation.” By July 1, Newsom ordered indoor restaurant dining and bars closed in 19 counties, affecting 72% of the state’s population.

It has been about two weeks since then, but it’ll take at least three weeks to learn whether the actions taken that week decisively changed the course of the pandemic, said Dr. Christina Ghaly, director of health services for Los Angeles County. Ghaly said Wednesday that if people got back to safer behavior — staying home as much as possible, avoiding social gatherings, wearing face coverings, keeping physical distance and workplaces following new safety protocols — L.A. County could avoid having hospitals and ICUs overwhelme­d.

Even more businesses have shut down this week, with Newsom ordering the closure of all bars and indoor dining rooms at restaurant­s. And in the hardest-hit counties that are home to more than 88% of California­ns, he also closed indoor operations of gyms, places of worship, hair salons, nail salons, malls, tattoo parlors, bowling alleys, arcades and offices for nonessenti­al industries.

If one thing is clear, officials across the state said, it’s now up to residents and businesses to do their best to slow the spread of disease. The percentage of younger adults getting infected with the coronaviru­s is growing, and younger adults are now making up a larger share of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients, making up nearly 30% of them in L.A. County.

“Birthday parties, the visits with grandparen­ts ... the barbecues: they are contributi­ng to a delay or rollback in reopening of businesses,” said Dr. Grant Colfax, San Francisco’s public health director.

California on Tuesday recorded its highest number of new cases in a single day, 11,142 infections; Tuesday also marked the secondhigh­est number of deaths in a single day statewide, with 144 deaths tallied, according to the Los Angeles Times’ California coronaviru­s tracker.

On Wednesday, at least another 8,000 new coronaviru­s cases and more than 125 deaths were reported statewide.

There have been a cumulative total of more than 354,000 confirmed cases and more than 7,300 deaths related to the coronaviru­s statewide.

Of them, more than 143,000 cases and more than 3,900 deaths have occurred among L.A. County residents.

More than 6,700 people with confirmed coronaviru­s infections were in the hospital statewide Tuesday. That’s more than double the daily average in May, when there were about 3,000 people hospitaliz­ed statewide with confirmed infections.

In L.A. County, officials estimated that the effective transmissi­on rate of the coronaviru­s has risen slightly to 1.07, according to data released Wednesday, although the actual number could be anywhere from 0.94 to 1.2. That means officials estimate that on average, every 1 person infected with the virus transmits it to 1.07 other people.

San Francisco on Wednesday reported an even worse transmissi­on rate of about 1.3.

“The virus is not only still out there, it is out there more than ever before,” said Colfax, the city’s public health director. “If we do not do better, we are looking at major problems by late August and September, with an average peak of 900 hospitaliz­ed patients by early October” — a number 10 times as bad as what the city is seeing now.

Colfax said it’s “certainly possible” that if conditions do not improve, officials may need to roll back reopening efforts in San Francisco and the greater Bay Area.

With evidence mounting about the disproport­ionate impact the pandemic is having on Latino and Black communitie­s, L.A. County officials Wednesday announced plans to expand testing where it’s most needed.

Officials announced they will open six new testing sites in communitie­s of color — Montebello, South Gate, Azusa, Panorama City, Compton and the Downey-Norwalk area. And they will add capacity at four existing sites in Bellflower, Pomona, El Monte and East Los Angeles.

An astonishin­g 89% of people testing positive for the coronaviru­s at a site in Willowbroo­k, south of Watts, have been Latino, even though 71% of those who were tested identified themselves Latino, said Dr. Erika Flores Uribe, an emergency room physician and the director of language access and inclusion at the county’s health services department.

The result is close to that of a study in San Francisco’s Mission District, in which 95% of people testing positive for the coronaviru­s were Latino.

Furthermor­e, Latino residents are testing positive at a much higher rate than any other racial or ethnic group in Los Angeles County, a trend that has been constant for months, said Ghaly, the L.A. County health services director.

The disparity could be reflective of white residents having less risk of being exposed to the coronaviru­s.

White residents are less likely to live in crowded households or work in essential jobs that require employees to leave home to earn money, Ghaly said. The disparity in the so-called positivity rate could also reflect greater access to and use of testing resources by white residents.

“Sadly, the underlying reasons why communitie­s of color are disproport­ionately impacted by the worst outcomes of COVID-19 is related to longstandi­ng structural and systemic issues, including social determinan­ts of health that the county is working to address and mitigate in the midst of this pandemic,” Ghaly said.

Poverty also increases the risk of testing positive.

“This reflects, again, the burden that our low-income communitie­s face in terms of their exposure to the virus, and also the fact that they were not — and still are not — accessing testing at an appropriat­e level given their degree of burden,” Ghaly said.

To figure out where the county should add testing sites, officials did an analysis to create a map of areas of L.A. County that had the greatest need for more coronaviru­s testing, based on factors like the positivity rate, the coronaviru­s mortality rate, and the rate at which residents are accessing testing services.

The results showed portions of South Los Angeles, Southeast L.A. County, the San Gabriel Valley, the Pomona Valley, the San Fernando Valley and the Antelope Valley needed greater access to testing.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ??
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? ORANGE COUNTY residents beginning Wednesday could get a COVID-19 test at no cost at the Anaheim Convention Center. Experts say that if people got back to safer behavior — such as wearing masks — we could avoid having hospitals overwhelme­d.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ORANGE COUNTY residents beginning Wednesday could get a COVID-19 test at no cost at the Anaheim Convention Center. Experts say that if people got back to safer behavior — such as wearing masks — we could avoid having hospitals overwhelme­d.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? MELISSA MEDINA, age 2, reaches out for a balloon animal at Union Rescue Mission’s 17th annual Christmas in July party, as her mother looks on.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times MELISSA MEDINA, age 2, reaches out for a balloon animal at Union Rescue Mission’s 17th annual Christmas in July party, as her mother looks on.

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