Los Angeles Times

City bracing for post- holiday effect

- By Maura Dolan

San Francisco remains vigilant despite a slowing of the rise in virus cases and hospitaliz­ations.

San Francisco’s rise in coronaviru­s infections and COVID- 19 hospitaliz­ations has slowed, but a new spike may occur in mid- January because of holiday gatherings, the city’s public health director said Tuesday.

Dr. Grant Colfax, the health director, said at a news conference that the city’s hospitals now have plenty of available beds in their intensive care units, although available ICU bed space throughout the Bay Area has fallen to 5.9% of capacity.

“We remain in a serious and critical position, but our collective actions are making a difference,” Colfax said.

The rate of increase in infections “seems to be slowing,” Colfax said, but it is “plausible” that the city might “see a sharp increase in the next few weeks.”

Colfax began his remarks by expressing support for residents of Southern California and the Central Valley, regions he said were experienci­ng “dire” and “catastroph­ic” pandemic conditions.

He said San Francisco hospitals now have four COVID- 19 patients from outside the city and may get more patients from other regions experienci­ng a dearth of intensive care beds.

The state Department of Public Health is allocating the vaccines to health providers, which then receive the doses directly from the vaccine makers, Colfax said. The vaccines will be distribute­d according to priorities establishe­d by the state.

San Francisco has not yet detected a new, potentiall­y more infectious strain of the virus that has spread rapidly in Britain and has been found in the U. S., including Southern California.

Still, Colfax said, he would not be surprised if the strain eventually is discovered in the city or elsewhere in the Bay Area.

The city’s Public Health Department has vaccinated more than 6,000 people so far, mostly front- line health workers at city- run health facilities, including Laguna Honda Hospital, one of the largest skilled- nursing facilities in the nation.

By the end of Tuesday, Colfax said, more than 90% of the residents at Laguna Honda will have received their f irst dose of the vaccine. Fifteen residents and 34 staff members at Laguna Honda have been diagnosed with COVID- 19.

The city has not found itself with any excess of vaccines, Colfax said.

“Right now, demand far outweighs the supply,” he said.

About 80,000 people who live or work in San Francisco will be vaccinated during the f irst round of distributi­on, he said.

“Please know,” he added, “we expect that everyone who wants the vaccine will get one eventually.”

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