Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California’s COVID-19 surge expected to get worse

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer was blunt about the region’s coronaviru­s conditions, calling this time – nearly nine months in – “the most difficult moment in the pandemic.”

Both cases and hospitaliz­ations have hit unpreceden­ted levels.

And officials fully expect conditions to deteriorat­e rapidly in the coming weeks, following Thanksgivi­ng gatherings and other holiday-related events.

“The increases we’re seeing now are not sustainabl­e,” Ferrer said. “They’re not sustainabl­e, because they’re gonna overwhelm not just our health care system, but the entire state’s health care system.”

Such prediction­s have been echoed by state officials and public health experts.

Here’s a look at what could be ahead in the coming weeks as COVID-19 infections continue to surge.

– Where are we at with hospitaliz­ations?

The county has surpassed its previous all-time high of 2,232 hospitaliz­ations set on July 18. On Sunday, the county recorded 2,316 people in its hospitals with confirmed coronaviru­s infection, according to data released Monday. The rate of increasing hospitaliz­ations in L.A. County has been breathtaki­ng, tripling from 777 on Halloween.

California as a whole has also seen record hospitaliz­ations.

Of particular concern is intensive care unit capacity. Currently, about 75% of the state’s 7,733 ICU beds are occupied – with 1,812 of them filled by COVID-19 patients.

There were 7,787 coronaviru­s patients hospitaliz­ed statewide as of Sunday, according to the latest available data. That’s the highest number recorded during the pandemic – the second consecutiv­e day the record for COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations has been broken. That’s a near-tripling of hospitaliz­ations since

Nov. 2, when 2,602 people were in the hospital with coronaviru­s infection.

COVID-19 cases requiring intensive care have tripled since Oct. 14, when 600 people were in ICU beds. On Sunday, 1,812 ICU cases were reported.

– What are the forecasts? The latest figures largely don’t include the most recent deluge of infections – as COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations reflect cases that were identified two to three weeks earlier, according to Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s Health and Human Services secretary.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday the state could exhaust its existing ICU capacity by mid-december.

The rural counties of Northern California could exceed ICU capacity by early December, Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley by midDecembe­r, the Sacramento area by late December, and the Bay Area by early January.

“If these trends continue, we’re going to have to take much more dramatic – arguably drastic – actions,” Newsom said during a briefing.

Newsom said about 59% of California’s hospital beds were currently occupied by patients needing care for all sorts of reasons – but that could rise to 78% by Christmas Eve.

He emphasized that the alarming numbers would come to pass if “we just sit back and we are bystanders at this moment and we don’t subsequent­ly improve upon our existing efforts.”

– What are experts saying? Hospitals are better equipped to handle a COVID surge than they were in the spring. Medical care has improved, and there is a great capacity to open additional facilities if needs arise. Still, with infections rising across the state, it could be harder for hard-hit counties to lean on other areas to take patients.

Experts say that, with advancemen­ts in medical treatments and knowledge of the disease gained over the last nine months, they are hopeful that a smaller proportion of people who are infected with the virus will die during this wave compared with lives lost during the spring or summer.

But those improvemen­ts could be jeopardize­d by overcrowdi­ng at hospitals, as medical staff is stretched thin and unable to provide the health care desperatel­y needed to save the lives of the sickest patients, experts told the Los Angeles Times.

Overall, public health profession­als say this marks a dangerous moment.

“It’s brutal. It’s astounding­ly bad. ... They’re seriously, seriously bad numbers,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious diseases control expert at the University of California, San Francisco. “We don’t have anyplace to decompress patients because stuff that’s just as bad is going on in Oregon and Nevada and Arizona.

“We are here on our own, and this is a natural disaster. And we need to be able to avoid the worst parts of this as much as possible. And if there were ever a time for prevention and heeding advice, this is it.”

– What can be done?

Los Angeles County has imposed controvers­ial restrictio­ns, including suspending outdoor restaurant dining, banning gatherings and closing playground­s. Officials hope these actions can slow the infection rate.

Newsom on Monday raised “the potential for a stay-at-home order” for areas in the strictest, or purple, tier of California’s coronaviru­s reopening road map.

“We will be coming out with some additional informatio­n,” Newsom said, “some additional recommenda­tions in the very, very near future.”

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