Los Angeles Times

L. A.- LIKE SPREAD BATTERS SUBURBS

Virus rates surge in Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties.

- By Luke Money and Rong- Gong Lin I I

When the autumn COVID- 19 surge erupted more than a month ago, the epicenter was once again Los Angeles County, where the large population of essential workers and others living in densely populated neighborho­ods made the region particular­ly vulnerable to the rapid spread of infections.

But now, Southern California’s more suburban counties are rapidly catching up, fueled by Thanksgivi­ng gatherings that have pushed coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations to unpreceden­ted levels and left hospital intensive care units at critical levels.

The numbers of people hospitaliz­ed for COVID- 19 in Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties have all doubled since the week of Thanksgivi­ng, according to a Times analysis.

The suburban counties are also tallying record levels of new daily infections — all substantia­lly worse than the summer surge and in many cases at a rate of increase worse than in L. A. County. While L. A. County has seen its latest average daily number of cases nearly triple from its summer peak, coun

ties in even worse shape relative to their summer highs include Ventura, San Bernardino and San Diego counties.

Riverside County has the highest rate relative to its summer maximum, more than quadruplin­g its average daily number of cases from its peak in August. On Thursday, Riverside recorded an average of nearly 3,500 cases a day over the last week, far worse than the comparable peak of nearly 800 in August.

On a per- capita basis, L. A. County has tallied more coronaviru­s cases per 100,000 residents over the last week than Ventura, San Diego and Orange counties but fewer than Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

Capacity in hospitals’ intensive care units continued to deteriorat­e across Southern California, with availabili­ty in the region falling to 6.2% from 7.7% a day earlier.

“The velocity of the increase — or the steepness of the curve — is much more prominent now than it was earlier,” said Dr. Robert Kim- Farley, medical epidemiolo­gist and infectious-diseases expert at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

“I think that it is a result of the widespread transmissi­on that was occurring over the Thanksgivi­ng holidays such that so many people — either asymptomat­ic or presymptom­atic people — were spreading the disease not only among themselves but within their own families,” Kim- Farley said.

That’s why it is so important for California­ns to follow the stay- at- home order as much as possible in the coming weeks, Kim- Farley said, to contain the spread of the highly contagious virus and prevent even worse calamity as winter begins. Unless current trends change, the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation forecasts that California’s cumulative COVID- 19 death toll could more than double

by the end of winter, to more than 50,000. More than 20,700 California­ns infected with the coronaviru­s have died of COVID- 19.

It may take even longer to begin seeing average daily coronaviru­s cases start to f latten compared with the spring surge, Kim- Farley said, because there are now so many households battling the virus. For the next week or two, more household members will come down with the disease, infected by roommates or relatives who left their homes during Thanksgivi­ng.

Orange County officials this week said the healthcare system faced an unpreceden­ted crisis as coronaviru­s patients streamed into hospitals. More than 1,100 coronaviru­s- positive patients were hospitaliz­ed countywide; 265 people were in intensive care, according to the latest available data.

“At the current rate of deteriorat­ion, the EMS system may collapse unless emergency directives are imple

mented now,” Dr. Carl Schultz, emergency medical services director for the Orange County Health Care Agency, wrote in a memo this week to hospitals and ambulance and paramedic providers.

Some immediate steps, he said, include allowing ambulances to travel longer distances to take patients to hospitals that can accept them, and permitting them to take a patient to another hospital if they’ve been waiting outside with the patient for more than an hour. Hospitals also should consider activating their surge plans, establishi­ng alternate treatment areas and canceling elective surgeries, he added.

Dr. Clayton Chau, Orange County’s health officer and Health Care Agency director, also encouraged residents “who can get services through urgent care, can get services through their primary care physician [ to] please go ahead and do so, and not just show up to the emergency room.”

Orange County, however, is far from an outlier as medical systems across the state feel intense pressure. California­ns are testing positive for the coronaviru­s and dying of COVID- 19 at unpreceden­ted levels. The state has averaged nearly 29,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day and about 150 daily deaths over the last week.

The timing and accelerati­on of the surge indicate that many ignored officials’ and experts’ calls to eschew traveling and gathering for Thanksgivi­ng — a potentiall­y chilling prospect, given that the wider winter holiday season is in full swing.

The state has responded by placing a new stay- athome order on Southern California and the Central Valley. Some parts of the Bay Area have also voluntaril­y joined the restrictio­ns, which now are in place for 36 million California­ns.

Los Angeles County reached another alarming milestone Friday, when the case count surged dramati

cally in a single day by 13,507 — breaking the all- time single- day record yet again — which pushed the county’s cumulative cases beyond 500,000.

“We’re seeing daily numbers of cases and hospitaliz­ations that we’ve not experience­d and, frankly, did not anticipate,” said L. A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer. “Our intensive care unit bed capacity continues to drop. We’re on a very dangerous track to seeing unpreceden­ted and catastroph­ic suffering and death.”

As of Thursday, the most recent day for which complete data are available, 3,850 COVID- 19 patients were hospitaliz­ed countywide, including 856 in the ICU — both records.

The number of people hospitaliz­ed in L. A. County with coronaviru­s infections has doubled since Thanksgivi­ng and quadrupled since a month ago, when there were 942.

“The best thing we can all do right now is stay in our homes whenever possible and away from people we don’t live with,” Ferrer said during a briefing Friday.

Officials fear the situation will only worsen as more people who may have been exposed during the Thanksgivi­ng holiday become sick. There is still hope that the new stay- at- home order will make a difference, but it will take weeks before it’s known whether people are following the rules and if the effects become apparent.

“We cannot undo what’s already been done, and collective­ly, we’re going to all pay a very high price for the actions we were taking in the past,” Ferrer said.

At this point, she added, “it’s not a question of if we’ll see a large increase of hospitaliz­ations and deaths” but a question of how severe the numbers will get.

Officials have often said that rising numbers of infections lead to increased hospitaliz­ations two to three weeks later. Two weeks ago, L. A. County was seeing an average of 4,500 new coronaviru­s cases per day. That wave is fueling the current record- high hospitaliz­ation numbers.

Should the same proportion hold, the recent average caseload of 13,500 new infections per day will trigger a large increase two weeks from now — possibly doubling the number of people in L. A. County hospitals to 7,300, including nearly 1,700 in intensive care.

There are only about 2,100 ICU adult beds across all county hospitals, Ferrer said.

“We are at a very critical juncture in the pandemic due to the fact that we have come so close to overcapaci­ty of our ICU beds,” KimFarley said.

“And that’s why it’s imperative for everyone to follow the guidelines and directions of public health officials, so that we don’t have a situation where loved ones are dying of COVID or, for that matter, of other serious illnesses, without having a ‘ room at the inn’ in hospital and ICU beds.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? NURSES ANTHONY STAMEGNA, left, and Virginia Petersen reposition a COVID- 19 patient at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills on Dec. 3. Medical systems statewide are feeling intense pressure.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times NURSES ANTHONY STAMEGNA, left, and Virginia Petersen reposition a COVID- 19 patient at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills on Dec. 3. Medical systems statewide are feeling intense pressure.

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