Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Will California’s coronaviru­s crisis look like Italy’s soon?

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

It begins each day in the early afternoon: Patients stream into hospitals with fevers, shakes, chills and breathing problems. In Italy, the latest country hardest hit by the new coronaviru­s, it’s been happening seemingly like clockwork.

“It’s really hard to see so many people sick at the same time,” Dr. Roberto Cosentini, a doctor in the northern city of Bergamo near Milan, said in a podcast for emergency room physicians. “It’s like a regular daily earthquake.”

Is this what’s in store for California?

More than 2,600 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in the Golden State and 55 people have died of the respirator­y disease. That’s a far cry from the 69,000 cases and 6,820 deaths reported in Italy.

But health officials here have hinted that it’s possible.

“We are in a grave crisis,” warned Dr. Scott Morrow, San Mateo County’s health officer. “Unless everyone does their part and follows the county’s shelter-in-place order and the governor’s Safer at Home order, we will be facing an Italy-type catastroph­e very soon,” he said in a statement released Monday night.

In nearby San Francisco, Dr. Grant Colfax, director of the Department of Public Health, is bracing for a surge in hospitaliz­ed patients within the next week or two. “The worst is yet to come,” he said.

California’s first coronaviru­s infection was confirmed in late January, and COVID-19 cases and deaths have been climbing exponentia­lly since the beginning of March.

On Tuesday, county officials across California announced 395 new cases of coronaviru­s infection; the previous Tuesday, there were only 158 new cases. Likewise, on Tuesday, 11 new deaths were reported across the state; the previous Tuesday, there were three new deaths.

No one can be sure what the future holds for California. If residents respect Gov. Gavin Newsom’s order to stay home as much as possible, illnesses and deaths may be avoided or delayed. On the other hand, if a single asymptomat­ic person enters the state and becomes a supersprea­der – transmitti­ng the virus to a large number of people – he or she could ignite a new outbreak.

Either way, there’s good reason to expect that the worst can come suddenly, as it has in Italy.

For weeks, King County in Washington state and the San Francisco Bay Area were the hardest-hit areas in the U.S. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, New York Gov. Andrew

Cuomo announced 5,707 new coronaviru­s cases on Monday night. The next day there were an additional 4,790 cases, bringing the Empire State’s total to 25,665.

“It’s happening right now in New York,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious disease expert at UC San Francisco. “They’re up against it.”

In Italy, the sudden rise in the death toll was probably due to a combinatio­n of bad luck and a failure to act quickly, Rutherford said.

In fact, Italy’s death toll is more than double that of China, the birthplace of the pandemic, despite the fact that China’s population is 23 times larger.

The first sign of problems came on Feb. 20 in the form of a previously healthy man in his 30s with an unusual case of pneumonia that required intensive care. Although he had no history of travel to China, he tested positive for the coronaviru­s at Codogno Hospital in the province of Lodi, about 30 miles southeast of Milan, according to a report in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Within the next day, 36 additional coronaviru­s cases were identified. Even worse, the virus quickly spread among the hospital’s medical staff, said Dr. Maurizio Cecconi, president-elect of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine and a coauthor of the JAMA report.

“Don’t underestim­ate this. This is not a normal flu. This is serious,” Cecconi said in an interview with the medical journal’s editor in chief. “The percentage of patients that require intensive care admission is high.”

An uneven public health response worsened matters. The Codogno area quickly closed businesses and many stayed at home, but other communitie­s nearby didn’t act so decisively. It wasn’t until March 8 – more than two weeks later – that a stayin-place directive was ordered for some 16 million people in Italy’s north, an area that included Venice and Milan.

The delays proved deadly. Bergamo was hit hard; the chapel at the city cemetery had to be converted into a morgue to handle the dead.

Italy was particular­ly vulnerable to COVID-19 because its population skews older, Rutherford said. According to the World Bank, 23% of Italy’s population is at least 65. Only Japan’s population is older. (In the United States, 16% of the population is 65 or older; in China, it’s just 11%.)

In a study of 803 people who died in Italy, about 88% of them were at least 70 years old, according to data Cecconi shared.

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? A hiker wearing a mask because of the coronaviru­s walks past the Hollywood sign in Griffith Park on Monday.
Los Angeles Times/tns A hiker wearing a mask because of the coronaviru­s walks past the Hollywood sign in Griffith Park on Monday.

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