Los Angeles Times

Virus cases in county set daily record

L. A. officials report 7,532 new infections, and the number could reach 9,000 a day by the end of next week.

- By Luke Money, Rong- Gong Lin I I and Benjamin Oreskes

Los Angeles County recorded a dramatic one- day rise in coronaviru­s cases Tuesday, shattering the single- day record and confirming some of the most dire forecasts about infections spreading ferociousl­y as the holiday season gets underway.

The surge in cases renewed worries about how the healthcare system will handle a crush of new patients, with some hospitals already approachin­g capacity. The numbers put more pressure on state and local officials to enact a tougher stay- at- home order in hopes of slowing the spread. Officials feared the Thanksgivi­ng holiday period would bring a f lood of new cases, and there are growing concerns the spike is far from over.

L. A. County is now forecastin­g up to 8,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day by the end of this week and potentiall­y 9,000 a day by the middle or end of next week, according to a source who listened to a briefing given by county health officials.

L. A. County on Tuesday reported more than 7,500 new cases — the most in a single day, which the director of public health called “the worst day thus far” of the pandemic. The previous single- day high for all of L. A. County was recorded on Nov. 23, according to The Times’ independen­t tally, with 6,186 cases.

“It will likely not remain the worst day of the pandemic in Los Angeles County. That will be tomor

row, and the next day and the next as cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths increase,” Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement.

With Tuesday’s tally of 7,532 cases, L. A. County is close to averaging 5,000 coronaviru­s cases a day over the last week — an astonishin­g quintuplin­g of the figure from mid- October, when there were only about 1,000 cases a day. Even in the summertime surge, which had been the worst of the pandemic, L. A. County maxed out at about 3,300 cases a day.

Hospitaliz­ations have more than tripled since Halloween, when there were about 800 people hospitaliz­ed, and surged past 2,400 on Monday. It was the second- consecutiv­e day that the high for hospitaliz­ations in L. A. County has been broken, and a number that’s 9% higher that the peak from the summer wave.

The unpreceden­ted spread of infections in this third wave of the pandemic comes as local officials implemente­d some of the strictest coronaviru­s- related regulation­s the county has seen in months, and as state officials warn that even more drastic action, such as a version of a stay- at- home order implemente­d in the springtime, may be necessary before hospitals are overwhelme­d with patients.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on

Monday said Southern California is forecast to run out of intensive care unit capacity by mid- to late December if current trends continue. By Christmas Eve, ICU beds are forecast to be at 107% of capacity across the region. While intensive care treatments have improved since the early days of the pandemic, all bets are off once ICUs are pushed beyond capacity.

“If, all of a sudden, you have one nurse taking care of seven patients on ventilator­s like in New York, the mortality can be astronomic­al,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious- disease expert at UC San Francisco.

More alarming, the cases reported Tuesday don’t represent infections that occurred during Thanksgivi­ng. Because of the virus’ incubation period of up to two weeks, transmissi­on that occurred over the holiday will show up in confirmed lab tests by roughly mid- December. That inf lux could be accompanie­d by a jump in hospitaliz­ations around Christmas and New Year’s Day, with a bump in deaths by mid- January.

Forty- six coronaviru­s- related deaths were reported in Los Angeles County on Tuesday. That’s significan­tly higher than the daily average of reported deaths over the last week, which has been about 30 a day.

In the face of the increases, county officials on Monday enacted a “targeted safer- at- home order” that is in effect through Dec. 20. It closes public playground­s; places new capacity limits on retail stores, outdoor museums, galleries, zoos and aquariums; and prohibits all gatherings among people from different households, except for outdoor religious services and political demonstrat­ions.

The deteriorat­ing situation seen in L. A. County is also playing out statewide, where more than 1.24 million people have been infected and more than 19,300 have died.

On Monday, statewide hospitaliz­ations broke another record for the third consecutiv­e day, with 8,240 people hospitaliz­ed with COVID- 19. That’s 15% worse that the previous high in the summer, when hospitaliz­ations topped out at 7,170.

The average net increase in people hospitaliz­ed in California with COVID- 19 is now about 342 patients a day over the last week, according to a Times analysis. The accelerati­on is twice as bad as the summertime surge, which saw the average net increase in hospitaliz­ations top out at 173 patients a day over a weeklong period in late June.

San Francisco officials signaled they may impose their own quarantine order for travelers and further reduce indoor capacity at businesses, similar to an order issued by Santa Clara County on Monday, and would not rule out banning outdoor restaurant dining, a step L. A. County took last week.

“What we are seeing now is a spike unlike anything we have seen since the beginning of this pandemic,” San Francisco Mayor London Breed said. “We are in trouble, and we are sounding the alarm.”

San Francisco is in the middle of a major surge that threatens to overwhelm the healthcare system, and the daily coronaviru­s case rate is not expected to stabilize soon, warned its director of health, Dr. Grant Colfax. With many people ignoring calls to stay home over Thanksgivi­ng, “we know, unfortunat­ely, that the worst is likely yet to come,” Colfax said. “If this trend continues, we will see a hospital bed shortage around Christmas.”

The most recent statewide seven- day positivity rate was 6.5%, double what was recorded on election day, when the rate was 3.2%. The daily positivity rate for L. A. County is worsening dramatical­ly, with officials reporting a daily rate of nearly 12% on Tuesday, up from 7% a week earlier.

Though the possibilit­y of additional shutdowns may increase resentment levels among the public, officials stressed that there is light at the end of the tunnel — including the potentiall­y imminent arrival of a vaccine.

Newsom said California expects to receive about 327,000 doses of Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine within the next few weeks.

While it won’t be a silver bullet — as widespread rollout to the general public is likely months away — officials said the prospect of even a limited number of doses is still a silver lining.

“Our most vulnerable could be getting vaccinated, our front- line healthcare workers could be getting vaccinated in just a matter of weeks — opening the gateway to so many more receiving this important tool to protect us,” said Dr. Mark Ghaly, the California health and human services secretary.

‘ If, all of a sudden, you have one nurse taking care of seven patients on ventilator­s like in New York, the mortality can be astronomic­al.’ — Dr. George Rutherford, infectious- disease expert

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM says Southern California is forecast to reach intensive care unit capacity by mid- to late December if current infection trends hold. Above, nurses in Thousand Oaks protest for more support.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM says Southern California is forecast to reach intensive care unit capacity by mid- to late December if current infection trends hold. Above, nurses in Thousand Oaks protest for more support.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE WAIT to be tested for the coronaviru­s at a walk- up site in San Fernando Recreation Park on Tuesday. Forty- six coronaviru­srelated deaths were reported in Los Angeles County on Tuesday, signif icantly higher than the average of about 30 a day over the last week.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times PEOPLE WAIT to be tested for the coronaviru­s at a walk- up site in San Fernando Recreation Park on Tuesday. Forty- six coronaviru­srelated deaths were reported in Los Angeles County on Tuesday, signif icantly higher than the average of about 30 a day over the last week.

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