Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Coronaviru­s cases spike to new daily high

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – California has again demolished a daily record for newly confirmed coronaviru­s cases, continuing a relentless onslaught of infections that has already sent more people to the hospital than at any point during the pandemic.

The state reported

34,490 new coronaviru­s cases Monday, a figure stratosphe­rically higher than any daily case count, according to data compiled by the Los Angeles Times.

So large is the gap between Monday’s report and the previous single-day record – set Friday, when 22,369 cases were tallied – that the difference of the two numbers, 12,121, would have ranked among California’s highest before the latest surge.

The record-shattering report coincides with when officials said they expected to begin seeing the consequenc­es of travel and gatherings for the Thanksgivi­ng holiday.

The numbers also may foreshadow a time when daily infection counts equaling the size of a small city could be more the norm than the exception.

“I would say this is the start of the Thanksgivi­ng bump,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said.

The latest increases, she said during a briefing Monday, “reflect actions we took in late November, and we can’t take those actions back. What we can do is change our actions today so that, two to three weeks from now, we’re not reporting a similarly disastrous cascade of events.”

Over the last week, California has averaged 22,220 new coronaviru­s cases per day – a 78% increase from two weeks ago, according to The Times’ county-by-county tally of infections.

The rate at which coronaviru­s tests are confirming infection has also soared in recent weeks. California’s seven-day positivity rate is now 10.5%, the latest state data show, up from the 14-day average of 8.4%.

Officials are quick to note that cases themselves are not a byproduct of testing, because screenings merely confirm whether someone is already infected. But the ballooning case count, combined with a greater proportion of tests coming back positive, makes clear that coronaviru­s transmissi­on is widespread throughout the state, experts say.

The extent of infections in California is particular­ly troubling because about 12% of those who test positive will fall ill enough to require hospitaliz­ations two to three weeks later. If case counts remain high for an extended period of time, the worry is that hospitals will be inundated, stretching bed capacity and the ability for trained staff to care for the flood of new patients.

Overworked staff and overtaxed facilities threaten to erode the quality of care for everyone, not just those battling COVID-19, officials say.

“Unfortunat­ely, we are shattering records, every day,” said Dr. Sara Cody, the health officer for Santa Clara County. “Many of our hospitals have already elected to cancel elective surgeries and other procedures in order to be able to care for the influx of COVID patients.”

There are now 10,070 coronaviru­s-positive patients hospitaliz­ed statewide and 2,360 are in intensive care, state data show. Both those figures are all-time highs.

The current number of hospitaliz­ations has doubled from less than three weeks ago.

“I think everyone at this point really shares with me this deep concern about how do we make sure that people understand, if the numbers don’t start to go down ... you look at what I say are horrific scenarios that end up playing out, not just in our county, but across the state,” Ferrer said.

Those, she said, would be “where your morgue can get backed up, where you’re delaying care for people who really need care.”

Given all the distressin­g data points seen during the recent surge, one relatively bright spot had been that the most devastatin­g metric – the number of deaths – had remained relatively low. But that’s no longer the case.

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