Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Stay-at-home order looms as COVID-19 cases explode

- By Rong-gong Lin II, Luke Money and Maura Dolan

LOS ANGELES – California reached another troubling COVID-19 milestone Tuesday, averaging 14,120 cases per day with more than 8,200 hospitaliz­ed – both new records.

The surge is putting more pressure on state and local officials to take more aggressive action to slow the spread before it overwhelms hospitals. Los Angeles County, which has been particular­ly hard hit, reported more than 7,500 new cases – the most in a single day.

Officials have said they would consider a restrictiv­e stay-at-home order if cases kept rising, which is now expected because the

Thanksgivi­ng weekend likely spread the virus even more.

– What are the options? Gov. Gavin Newsom warned Monday that a new stay-at-home order could be coming.

It’s possible such an order would be imposed only on counties in the worst shape among those in the purple tier — although the vast majority of counties are in that tier. “We will be coming out with some additional informatio­n, some additional recommenda­tions in the very, very near future,” Newsom said.

Few details of such an order have been announced. Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s health and human services secretary, said Monday that officials could learn from the spring lockdown.

“One of the most important things we’ve learned is we can be not just more surgical with what we do, but we can really prescribe it for a shorter or a different amount of time,” Ghaly said. “Early on, some of those orders really were open-ended; we weren’t sure. Today, we know that we can get impact from certain interventi­ons in a reliable way more quickly, and that’s part of what we’re considerin­g.”

But it might take some cues from L.A. County, which now has the toughest restrictio­ns in the state.

Officials in L.A. County rolled out a “targeted saferat-home order” that is in effect through Dec. 20. It closes public playground­s; places new capacity limits on retail stores, outdoor museums, galleries, zoos and aquariums; and prohibits all gatherings among people from different households, except for outdoor religious services and political demonstrat­ions.

Those limitation­s are on top of other restrictio­ns that went into effect last week, including a renewed ban on outdoor dining.

On Saturday, L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer held out hope these restrictio­ns could be enough to slow the spread. But she stressed it only works if people follow the rules.

“If this doesn’t work, and two to three weeks from now we find ourselves in a worse place than we are, we’re going to have to go back and look at what else do we have as options, because we cannot continue to risk overwhelmi­ng the healthcare system,” Ferrer said. “I don’t think there’s any disagreeme­nt about that — that’s a disaster that we have to avoid at all costs.”

Other counties have their own various restrictio­ns.

In Santa Clara County, hotel use has been restricted to essential travel or to people needing medical isolation or quarantine. Capacity at retail establishm­ents was further capped. Authoritie­s also suspended contact sports for profession­al teams, forcing the San Francisco 49ers to look elsewhere to play their home games scheduled for December.

San Francisco this week will announce more rollbacks, including a possible quarantine order for travelers and reduced indoor capacity at businesses, as the coronaviru­s continues to surge, city officials said Tuesday.

Dr. Grant Colfax, San Francisco’s director of public health, said: “We know unfortunat­ely that the worst is likely yet to come.”

– What is the situation at hospitals?

Newsom on Monday said Southern California is forecast to run out of intensive care unit capacity by mid- to late December if current trends continued. By Christmas Eve, ICU beds are forecast to be at 107% of capacity across the region. While intensive care treatments have improved since the early days of the pandemic, all bets are off once ICUS are pushed beyond capacity.

The average net increase in people hospitaliz­ed in California with COVID-19 is now about 342 patients a day over the last week, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis. The accelerati­on is twice as bad as the summertime surge, which saw the average net increase in hospitaliz­ations top out at 173 patients a day over a weeklong period in late June.

In L.A. County, hospitaliz­ations have more than tripled since Halloween, when there were about 800 people hospitaliz­ed, and surged past 2,400 on Monday. It was the second consecutiv­e day that the high for hospitaliz­ations in L.A. County has been broken, and a number that’s 9% higher that the peak from the summer wave.

–How about the vaccine? The developmen­t of COVID vaccines offers hope for 2021. But it will not help with this winter surge.

California expects to receive about 327,000 doses of Pfizer’s vaccine, to go to front-line health workers.

The CDC’S Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices met Tuesday to debate and vote on who should be first in line to receive initial doses of a COVID-19 vaccine. They recommende­d that the initial vaccinatio­n effort focus on front-line healthcare workers, as well as residents of longterm care facilities, such as nursing homes and assistedli­ving facilities. As more vaccine becomes available, more groups will be eligible.

Most experts feel that the immunizati­on effort in the United States will be in high gear by late spring and early summer, as Pfizer and Moderna continue to ramp up production and other vaccine candidates complete their clinical trials and apply for emergency-use authorizat­ion.

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? People wait in line at a walk-up COVID-19 testing site at San Fernando Recreation Park Tuesday in San Fernando.
Los Angeles Times/tns People wait in line at a walk-up COVID-19 testing site at San Fernando Recreation Park Tuesday in San Fernando.

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