Los Angeles Times

New L.A. County infection estimate

Of L.A. County’s 10 million people, more than 3 million may have been infected, scientists say.

- By Luke Money and Rong-Gong Lin II

Scientists say the virus has infected more than 3 million. That’s 1 in 3 residents.

One in three Los Angeles County residents have been infected with the coronaviru­s since the beginning of the pandemic, according to new estimates by county scientists, an astonishin­g sign of how rapidly the virus is spreading in the hard-hit region.

The estimate, based on scientific modeling, means officials believe more than 3 million of L.A. County’s 10 million residents have been infected with the coronaviru­s, including nearly 13,000 who have died.

That’s more than triple the cumulative number of coronaviru­s cases that have been confirmed by testing. Officials have long believed that testing only captures a certain percentage of those who are infected because many with the virus don’t show symptoms or suffer only mild symptoms.

The rising number of those infected has actually slowed the pace of coronaviru­s transmissi­on, as the virus is increasing­ly coming into contact with people who have survived the infection and likely developed immunity.

“Unfortunat­ely, we are still engaging in behaviors that facilitate spread of the virus, so it is still able to find plenty of susceptibl­e people to infect,” said Dr. Roger Lewis, director of COVID-19 hospital demand modeling for the L.A. County Department

of Health Services.

About 75% of L.A. County’s population will need to be immune to the virus through widespread vaccinatio­ns to dramatical­ly slow its spread, Lewis estimated. Even if half of L.A. County’s population were immune, “and yet we decide to just pretend that we don’t have to take precaution­s, we will still have a very, very devastatin­g pandemic.”

L.A. County averaged more than 15,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day over the past week — one of the highest such rates seen so far in the pandemic.

Surpassing 15,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day takes the county to a level that officials have warned may tip L.A. County’s overwhelme­d hospitals into a worse catastroph­e, straining resources and stretching staffing to a point that healthcare officials may have to choose which patients receive the attention of critical care nurses and respirator­y therapists and access to ventilator­s and which patients receive palliative care.

Because of this, there has been some talk in L.A. County of adding more teeth to the stay-at-home order, including possible new restrictio­ns on some retail and gyms. A decision hasn’t been made on whether closures or further restrictio­ns on capacity are needed. But settings that may be scrutinize­d could include outdoor gyms — which have been allowed to be open at 50% capacity — and indoor malls and retail, which are supposed to be open at up to only 20% of capacity, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said. The mayor added he would back possible new health orders if experts thought it would help.

Officials have been urging residents to take even more precaution­s to avoid getting sick.

When leaving home to access essential services, L.A.

County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said, people should bring sanitizing wipes to disinfect their cellphones, car keys, work stations and door handles — anything they might touch that others also have touched. Health officials also suggested avoiding eating or drinking with anyone not in your household, washing or sanitizing your hands every hour if you’re around others, and taking a break from shopping.

They also issued a new recommenda­tion: People who live with elderly residents or with residents who have an underlying medical condition and must go out of their households should wear a mask at home.

More than 1,600 dead in a week

More than 1,600 people in Los Angeles County have died from COVID-19 in the last week — a toll Ferrer called “tragic, upsetting and, frankly, overwhelmi­ng” and a sign of extraordin­ary danger as the possibly more contagious variant of the virus begins to spread in California.

Follow virus precaution­s “as if your life or the life of a loved one depends on it,” she said during a briefing Wednesday. “Because it just may.”

Over the weeklong period ending Wednesday, an average of 232 people died daily from COVID-19 countywide, according to data compiled by The Times. By comparison, the confirmed death toll in the Northridge earthquake — which struck the Southland almost exactly 27 years ago — was 57.

Just in the past seven days, the county set, then tied, its daily record for new coronaviru­s-related deaths, with 318.

The last week represents an accelerati­on, though not an aberration. A total of 2,904 L.A. County residents have died from COVID-19 over the last 14 days — a number that represents nearly one-fourth of the county’s cumulative death toll, which is just short of 13,000.

“Your infection could lead to dozens of other infections in just a matter of a few days, and someone along that path of transmissi­on could very well die from COVID-19,” Ferrer said. “These are just not normal times, and so we can’t go out and just continue to act like nothing is going on.”

Ferrer did not rule out issuing additional restrictio­ns.

“We are considerin­g all options at this point,” she said Wednesday, without elaboratin­g on what new orders might look like.

“We are very, very worried about the continued high number of cases here,” Ferrer said, “and I feel like there really is not a huge window here to try to get the surge under control.”

Hospitaliz­ations level off, still high

In L.A. County, new COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations have leveled off for now, with even hints of a slight decline. But hospitals are still overstretc­hed and hospitaliz­ations are extraordin­arily high; the ICU at Memorial Hospital of Gardena, for instance, is at 320% occupancy.

Over the past few weeks, an average of 700 to 850 new patients a day with coronaviru­s infections have been admitted to hospitals in L.A. County — a number that has pushed hospitals to prepare for the need to ration care.

“That’s three times higher than what was seen earlier in the pandemic,” said Dr. Christina Ghaly, the L.A. County director of health services.

Although the stable numbers are welcome news, they likely represent a stabilizat­ion in transmissi­on that took place after Thanksgivi­ng — as L.A. County and California officials issued stay-at-home orders — but before Christmas, Ghaly said. It will take more time to see the effect of Christmas and New Year’s gatherings on hospitaliz­ations, Ghaly said: “We just don’t have the informatio­n available at this point in time to determine whether or not that surge happened and, if so, how steep those numbers will climb.”

If there was a large increase in virus transmissi­on over the holidays, “this would be absolutely devastatin­g to our hospitals,” she said. Just sustaining the current levels of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations jeopardize­s care for future COVID-19 patients and others who are experienci­ng non-COVID illnesses and emergencie­s such as strokes and heart attacks.

“For there to be any meaningful relief for healthcare providers, we need a swift and significan­t decline in hospitaliz­ations for a period of one to two months at a minimum,” Ghaly said. “Please do not let the current number of daily hospitaliz­ations feel normal to you just because it’s plateaued . ... It is unpreceden­ted in the course of this pandemic in Los Angeles County, and everyone should continue to be concerned about what could happen if hospitaliz­ations again start to increase.”

Even if transmissi­on was relatively controlled over

Christmas and New Year’s, with — on average — every infected person passing on the virus to one other person, Ghaly said, “we would still expect to see very high continued demand for hospital-based services with a continued limited supply of hospital beds — as well as in particular ICU beds — over the next four weeks.”

Hospital morgues are overloaded

Across Southern California, hospitals are overcrowde­d to an extent not seen in modern history. In Ventura County on Tuesday, there was a total of 1,002 hospitaliz­ed patients — 448 of them infected with the coronaviru­s. “I don’t know that we’ve ever had that many patients hospitaliz­ed at the same time in our county,” said Steve Carroll, Ventura County emergency medical services administra­tor.

“It does not seem to be getting better, unfortunat­ely,” Carroll told the Ventura County Board of Supervisor­s. “All hospitals are overloaded at all times.”

The slight decrease in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations noted by state officials hasn’t happened in Ventura County, where they’re at alltime highs, said Dr. Robert Levin, Ventura County health officer. “This week is critical. And I think we will know over the next five days or so by watching our hospital census where we’re headed with this.”

Some hospital morgues are full, and hospitals are seeing delays of up to three days in getting the dead out of their crypts and into a mortuary.

In some cases, a mortuary can handle only four embalmings a day and faces a backup if more than four bodies arrive.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? NURSE SUSHA
Abraham places a COVID patient on her stomach to help her breathe Tuesday at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times NURSE SUSHA Abraham places a COVID patient on her stomach to help her breathe Tuesday at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center.

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