Los Angeles Times

Dodger Stadium test site reopens

City had stopped virus checks for the holiday weekend to make traff ic changes.

- By Rong- Gong Lin I I and Luke Money

Los Angeles County has become the latest county in California to impose a mandatory quarantine on longdistan­ce travelers.

At least two other counties — Santa Clara and San Francisco — have similar mandatory orders. The California Department of Public Health on Nov. 13 issued an advisory urging California­ns to stay home or in their region and avoid nonessenti­al travel, including for tourism or recreation.

The regional stay- at

home order prohibits hotels and other lodging companies from offering rooms to people visiting for tourism and leisure.

The moves are part of a desperate effort to slow the spread of COVID- 19, which is pushing hospitals to the breaking point. L. A. County has seen an unpreceden­ted surge in both cases and deaths since November and has emerged as one of the nation’s leading hot spots.

Travel at airports picked up dramatical­ly during the Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas holidays, and officials fear that could cause COVID- 19 to spread even more.

So will the quarantine work? Here’s what we know:

Who it affects: Anyone traveling for leisure or recreation, or to visit a family member for a nonessenti­al reason, who enters L. A. County from anywhere outside the Southern California region, which is defined as the counties of Imperial, Inyo, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura.

What they need to do: Quarantine themselves for 10 days. That means they need to stay at home or find other lodging and avoid contact with others, meaning they should not go out to grocery stores or restaurant­s but instead have food delivered to them.

Who is exempted: Licensed healthcare profession­als, those working for essential government or infrastruc­ture reasons, people transiting through L. A. County and not staying overnight, people who are members of profession­al or collegiate sports teams and personnel of a film or media production operating within the county, among others.

“We already saw what happened after all of the travel and the intermingl­ing across the Thanksgivi­ng holiday,” said L. A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer. “The possibilit­ies are far too great that, in addition to the memories and gifts you came home with, you may have also brought the coronaviru­s.

“You may not show symptoms yet. You may never show symptoms. But that doesn’t mean you’re not infected with this virus. The best way to ensure you don’t infect others is to remain home for the COVID- 19 incubation period. And this means for a minimum of 10 days.”

A negative test result on Day 3, Day 5 or Day 7 doesn’t mean a person can’t become positive on Day 8, Day 9 or Day 10, Ferrer said.

A negative test early in the quarantine period may simply not detect low levels of virus in the body that will replicate itself to higher levels later.

“That’s why we’re asking you to remain home for the entire 10 days,” Ferrer said.

Those who test positive and used a home testing kit should notify all their close contacts, Ferrer said.

“That’s everyone you’ve been in contact with for 15 minutes or longer over a 24- hour period from two days before you tested positive until your last time you expose people to yourself. And you need to tell them that they should quarantine for 10 days,” Ferrer said.

“If you have tested positive and you need help isolating or notifying your close contacts, please call us at 1 ( 833) 540- 0473 and a public health specialist will help connect you to resources,” Ferrer said.

In the Bay Area, there have been questions about how aggressive­ly officials will enforce the rules. The quarantine order is enforceabl­e by law in San Francisco; lack of compliance is a misdemeano­r punishable by f ine or imprisonme­nt. However, officials in San Francisco told The Times last month that they were focusing on education over enforcemen­t.

“We do not want to use a criminal justice approach for a public health challenge,” a spokesman for San Francisco’s Public Health Department said.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? VEHICLES inch along at the Dodger Stadium coronaviru­s testing site in June. The site was closed over the weekend after neighbors complained of traff ic.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times VEHICLES inch along at the Dodger Stadium coronaviru­s testing site in June. The site was closed over the weekend after neighbors complained of traff ic.
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? A WORKER administer­s a pref light coronaviru­s test to a passenger last month in the Tom Bradley Internatio­nal Terminal at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport. Officials fear that dramatic increases in travel over the holidays could exacerbate the spread of COVID- 19.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times A WORKER administer­s a pref light coronaviru­s test to a passenger last month in the Tom Bradley Internatio­nal Terminal at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport. Officials fear that dramatic increases in travel over the holidays could exacerbate the spread of COVID- 19.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? A PASSENGER pushes a stroller on New Year’s Eve at LAX. An advisory urges California­ns to stay home or in their region and avoid nonessenti­al travel.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times A PASSENGER pushes a stroller on New Year’s Eve at LAX. An advisory urges California­ns to stay home or in their region and avoid nonessenti­al travel.

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