Oroville Mercury-Register

Governor says stay home order likely to be extended

Hundreds of thousands of vaccines are on the way

- By Emily Deruy ederuy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SACRAMENTO » With the recent surge in coronaviru­s cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths showing few signs of abating, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday it’s “very likely” California will extend into 2021 the stay-home orders affecting most residents of the Golden State.

The restrictio­ns were set to begin expiring at the end of December for some regions, but the state plans to evaluate capacity in hospital intensive care units and other factors in the coming days that will likely mean more time at home.

“We are anticipati­ng a substantia­l increase in the hospital surge,” Newsom said at a Monday coronaviru­s news conference.

Some projection­s forecast more than 75,000 hospitaliz­ations in the coming weeks, more than four times current levels, with families

planning to gather over the Christmas holiday despite pleas from public health officials to stay home. That could overwhelm hospitals and ICUs already straining to care for existing patients.

Hospitaliz­ations in California already have increased 63% in the last two weeks, with more than 17,000 coronaviru­s patients now in the hospital. ICU numbers have also increased 51%, with more than 3,640 patients needing critical care. And the death rate has climbed, to a seven- day average of 233 deaths a day. The testing positivity rate has also crept up from less than 9% two weeks ago to 12%, highest since the earliest days of the pandemic.

The seven- day average for new cases reached 37,892 over the weekend, and while that’s slightly below the previous average, Newsom said it’s too early to tell whether the latest figures signal good news.

Statewide, the state has just 2.5% capacity available at intensive care units, including 0% in Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley. In the Bay Area, ICU availabili­ty stands at 13.7%, just below Greater Sacramento’s 16.2%. The only area in the state not under a stay-home order remains Northern California, where the ICU threshold sits at 28.7%. The state has pegged its current stay-home rules — which shut down most indoor activities, sharply limit social gatherings and impose quarantine­s on travelers —

to 15% ICU availabili­ty.

When a region has 0% available space in its ICUs, it doesn’t necessaril­y mean it doesn’t have any ICU space available, but rather that hospitals must activate surge beds and staff they don’t ordinarily use. It also raises the prospect those extra beds will be understaff­ed, or use staff with less- than- optimum training.

“We are worried that certain regions do exceed their existing capacity and even may go beyond the existing surge capacity they currently have planned,” warned Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly, noting that about 12% of today’s cases will require hospitaliz­ation, and 12% of those will likely require ICU admission.

Stephen Parodi, an executive vice president with Kaiser Permanente, said the healthcare giant has tapped cardiologi­sts to help out with intensive care and postponed even outpatient elective procedures to devote staff to those spending the night in the hospital.

In Kaiser’s Northern California region, Parodi said, coronaviru­s patients account for 40% of hospitaliz­ations, half of all ICU patients, and a quarter of ventilator use. A third of ICUs are close to full, and at a couple of hospitals, entire ICUs are occupied by those with COVID-19. Unlike some smaller hospitals, Kaiser still has the ability to meet demand by transferri­ng patients within its own network, but that’s getting more complicate­d as hospitaliz­ations rise.

“Those are really significan­t numbers that we’ve never seen in the course of the pandemic so far,” Parodi

said.

“I’m extremely concerned that with the coming Christmas and New Years holidays,” he added, “that if we repeat the same kind of behavior that occurred with Thanksgivi­ng Day, we’re going to look at a much worse situation.”

Kaiser is not alone. San Mateo County on Monday announced it would spend $4.5 million to add 10 ICU beds at Dignity Health’s Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City that will serve the entire Bay Area region.

“It does appear as if we are heading for a surge upon a surge,” said Louise Rogers, chief of San Mateo County Health.

The county is also using more than 80 hotel beds to house people who don’t need the level of care a hospital provides but who don’t have a safe, uncrowded space to recover.

To the south, Santa Clara County reopened DePaul Health Center in Morgan Hill on Dec. 15 to care for “step down” patients who no longer need hospitalle­vel care. There are currently 12 patients at DePaul, a spokeswoma­n said Monday.

Already, the state has opened four “alternativ­e care” sites, including at the Sleep Train Arena in Sacramento, and could open at least that many more. The sites are currently caring for 62 patients, but that number is likely to rise. One of the sites is in hardhit Imperial County, where

Newsom has requested an extension of federal help through January.

In the past, places like Imperial County transferre­d patients elsewhere. But as COVID-19 surges across the state, that becomes less of a possibilit­y.

Yet, the largest challenge at many hospitals is not bed space or personal protective equipment like masks and gloves, but staffing, with the traveling nurses that have typically offered some relief in high demand across the country.

The state has already dispatched 607 medical workers to help at 75 facilities across 24 counties, Newsom said, and is requesting more federal help from the Department of Defense.

California is also considerin­g implementi­ng a new quarantine protocol for visitors from the United Kingdom, where a new strain of the coronaviru­s that appears to be more transmissi­ble is raising alarm. So far, it has not been found in California.

There is one bright spot, Newsom said: More than 70,000 people in the state have received the first dose of Pfizer’s coronaviru­s vaccine and hundreds of thousands more frontline workers are expected to be inoculated this week.

Some 560,625 doses of the Pfizer vaccine should arrive this week, Newsom said, along with more than 670,000 doses of the newly approved Moderna vaccine.

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