Los Angeles Times

Inf lux of vaccine headed to state

The 1 million doses come as ICU beds get scarce and the state buys more body bags.

- By Luke Money

Word of the 1 million doses comes as ICU beds f ill and deaths surge.

California stands to receive at least 1 million more doses of COVID- 19 vaccine by the end of the month, an inf lux that will help arm the state’s healthcare workforce against the most intense and severe wave of the disease yet.

The additional 393,900 doses of the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine, as well as potentiall­y 672,000 doses of the Moderna therapeuti­c — should it receive U. S. authorizat­ion, as expected — would supplement the state’s previously announced f irst allocation of about 327,000.

But that stream of vaccines, though welcome, will do little to dam the river of new infections that has f looded California in recent weeks. The supply remains limited and initially will be steered toward front- line healthcare workers and residents of long- term care facilities.

With a vaccine not expected to be available to the general public until at least the spring, Gov. Gavin Newsom emphasized Tuesday that California­ns need to remain vigilant and double down on infection- prevention measures as the state wrestles with “the most challengin­g and difficult surge we’ve experience­d since the beginning of this pandemic.”

“This is a deadly disease, and we need to be mindful of where we are in this current journey together, to the vac

cine,” he said during a briefing. “We are not at the finish line yet.”

Still, the arrival of vaccines provides a glimmer of optimism in a year that has had little and portends a time when the pandemic will be in the rearview mirror.

Facilities in four California cities — Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco and Eureka — received vaccine doses Monday. Twentyfour other sites were expected to get shipments Tuesday, and f ive more Wednesday.

San Francisco started administer­ing the vaccine to front- line healthcare workers Tuesday, distributi­ng a f irst batch of 12,675 doses to hospitals across the city.

“We are embarking on a vaccine distributi­on effort unlike anything this country or San Francisco has ever seen,” said Dr. Grant Colfax, the director of public health. “While this is a significan­t moment that we should celebrate, we have a long road ahead of us.”

Nearly 5,000 doses arrived Tuesday morning at UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento.

Eva Teniola, a clinical nurse in the emergency department, was the f irst employee to receive it. Teniola, 47, has been working at UC Davis for almost 10 years and said she has never seen anything as severe as COVID- 19.

“People die alone, and it’s so sad,” she said. “They don’t have family because it’s strictly no visitors, so we have to stay with them.”

Cedars- Sinai in Los Angeles also received its f irst vaccine shipment Tuesday.

“The arrival of the COVID- 19 vaccine signifies a powerful and positive shift change for our community after months of fear, exhaustion and illness,” Chief Operating Officer Dr. Jeffrey A. Smith said in a statement. “Until today, the vaccine was the missing tool in our evergrowin­g toolkit of treatments and prevention methods against the virus.”

Keck Medicine of USC and USC Verdugo Hills Hospital are scheduled to receive about 2,500 vaccine doses between them this week.

Officials said they anticipate picking up the doses Thursday and beginning vaccinatio­ns within four hours. The priority will be those caring for COVID- 19 patients and those who work in high- risk settings or in areas where patients are being tested, according to Dr. Neha Nanda, medical director of infection prevention at the USC Keck School of Medicine.

“We have the vaccine; that’s amazing,” Nanda said. “It took more than 10 years to get the polio vaccine. ... Now, within nine months, we have a vaccine. It is going to change our lives.”

Belying the hope that accompanie­s the vaccines, though, is the horror of a pandemic that is infecting, hospitaliz­ing and killing unpreceden­ted numbers of California­ns.

Over the last week, an average of 164 California­ns have died from COVID- 19 every day, roughly quadruple the level seen a month ago, according to data compiled by The Times.

Amid the rising fatalities, Newsom said, the state purchased and distribute­d 5,000 additional body bags.

“It’s not the f lu. This is not something to trif le with,” he said. “This is a deadly disease, a deadly pandemic.”

More than 21,400 California­ns have died from COVID- 19 — nearly 2,000 of them in the last two weeks.

The pandemic is straining healthcare systems up and down the state as the number of hospitaliz­ed patients continues to reach new heights.

On Monday, there were 14,283 COVID- 19 patients hospitaliz­ed in California; 3,081 of them were in intensive care units. Both f igures are record highs, representi­ng increases of 73% and 63%, respective­ly, from two weeks ago.

As harrowing as those totals are, officials remain concerned about what may come next. Because of the lagging nature of the coronaviru­s, it typically takes an infected person about two weeks to fall ill enough to require hospitaliz­ation.

Over the last week, California has averaged almost 33,000 new cases per day, up 133% from two weeks ago. The state shattered its daily record for new cases Monday, with 42,129.

Officials warn that if those who were recently infected require care at the same levels as those who preceded them, California is barreling toward disaster with hospitals that are overwhelme­d and profession­als who are overworked.

Already, ICU beds across the state are at critical levels. In the Southern California region — which the state defines as Imperial, Inyo, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties — available ICU capacity Tuesday had shrunk to 1.7%, officials said.

In the San Joaquin Valley, remaining ICU capacity was at 1.6%, a meager f igure but an improvemen­t from Monday, when it was at 0% — meaning some critically ill patients had to be housed in hospital areas not designed to care for critical patients.

“Many folks may be thinking that this is just not anything to be really worried about, because hospitals can just add more beds. The reality is, every bed needs to be staffed by highly trained and skilled healthcare workers, and we don’t have an endless supply of healthcare workers, and those that are here saving lives every day are exhausted,” L. A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Monday.

While the future seems brighter, Newsom warned that there are still dark days ahead and that residents must do everything in their power to control the surge — including wearing masks in public, washing hands regularly, staying home when sick and keeping physical distance from, and avoiding gatherings with, those outside their household.

“Mark my words: We will come out of it stronger than ever,” he said. “We want to come out of it healthier than ever. We want you to be there to experience the resurgence, this recovery, California’s comeback. It’s right in front of us. But it’s also inside us. It’s our decisions, again, not just conditions, that will determine that fate and future.”

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SIBLINGS Ricardo and Kelley Medina waited in line for a free COVID- 19 test Tuesday in Los Angeles. More than 21,400 California­ns have died of the disease, nearly 2,000 of them in the last two weeks.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SIBLINGS Ricardo and Kelley Medina waited in line for a free COVID- 19 test Tuesday in Los Angeles. More than 21,400 California­ns have died of the disease, nearly 2,000 of them in the last two weeks.

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