Marin Independent Journal

LA County finds 1st case of variant

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On Saturday the county announced it had detected its first case of a more transmissi­ble strain of the coronaviru­s.

California reported 669 COVID-19 deaths — the second-highest daily death count — on Saturday and the nation’s most populous county announced it had detected its first case of a more transmissi­ble strain of the coronaviru­s

Public health authoritie­s in Los Angeles County confirmed its first case of the variant of COVID-19 first detected in the United Kingdom. It was identified in a man who recently spent time in the county. The man has traveled to Oregon, where he is isolating.

Although his is the first confirmed case of the variant, health officials believe it is already spreading in a county that surpassed 1 million coronaviru­s cases on Saturday. Although the variant does not appear to make people sicker, it spreads more easily, which could result in more infections, and with them, additional hospitaliz­ations in a region hit hard by the surge.

“The presence of the U.K. variant in Los Angeles County is troubling, as our healthcare system is already severely strained with more than 7,500 people currently hospitaliz­ed,” said Barbara Ferrer, director of the county’s Department of Public Health.

The state has been seeing more than 500 deaths and 40,000 new cases daily for the past two weeks, and many regions, especially in the south, have seen their hospitals and especially intensive care units overwhelme­d.

Lawmakers and public health officials have said mass vaccinatio­ns are the key to flattening the surge, but they’re increasing­ly concerned about the rocky rollout of the vaccine.

A center that can handle as many as 12,000 shots a day opened Friday at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles but Gov. Gavin Newsom and others said they had no idea when, if or how many doses will arrive from the federal government.

Newsom said that he and other governors were told earlier this week that a reserve supply of 50 million doses would be distribute­d. California has received more than 3.5 million doses of the vaccine and has administer­ed over 1 million doses, while anticipati­ng hundreds of thousands more.

Michael Pratt, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said there has been no reduction in doses shipped to states.

But around the state, counties said they were struggling to make vaccinatio­n plans and said mass inoculatio­ns of people 65 and older, who represent most COVID-19 deaths, will have to wait, despite Newsom this week adding them to the eligibilit­y list.

Instead, they are focusing on those at the head of the eligibilit­y line: health care workers and the most vulnerable seniors in nursing homes. In addition, it takes two separate doses spaced weeks apart to ensure the most complete virus protection, health experts say.

Without a steady and predictabl­e supply, long-range planning for vaccine distributi­on is challengin­g, said Dr. Paul Simon, chief science officer of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

The county— the nation’s most populous with 10 million residents — is struggling to vaccinate its 800,000 health workers and doesn’t anticipate being able to provide largescale inoculatio­ns of its 1.3 million people 65 and older until February, Simon said.

“We don’t need the full supply to begin vaccinatin­g,” Simon said. “But there will be a heck of a lot of frustratio­n if we open it up for that many people and there’s a very little supply of vaccine to serve them.”

The city of San Francisco announced it’s ready to handle 10,000 people a day at mass vaccinatio­n sites but can’t put the plans in motion because it’s unclear how many doses will be available.

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