Porterville Recorder

California closes in on 3 million coronaviru­s cases

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — California is closing in on 3 million coronaviru­s cases as the state tries to smooth the rocky rollout of vaccines during a continuing spike in COVID-19 deaths.

The state reported 432 deaths on Sunday, a day after recording the second-highest daily count of 669, according to the Department of Public Health. California’s death toll since the start of the pandemic rose to 33,392, while total cases reached 2.94 million.

Hospitaliz­ations and intensive care unit admissions remained on a slight downward trend, but officials have warned that could reverse when the full impact from transmissi­ons during Christmas and New Year’s Eve gatherings is felt.

“As case numbers continue to rise in California, the total number of individual­s who will have serious outcomes will also increase,” the health department said in a statement Sunday.

There have been about 500 deaths and 40,000 new cases daily for the past two weeks.

Lawmakers and public health officials have said the surge won’t be flattened without mass vaccinatio­ns, but California

has trailed the rest of the country when it comes to inoculatin­g its residents. So far the state has vaccinated just 2,468 people per 100,000, a rate that falls well below the national average of about 3,300, according to federal data cited Saturday by the Sacramento Bee.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said that he and other governors were told last week that a reserve supply of 50 million doses would be distribute­d, but no timetable was given.

After California adjusted its vaccinatio­n plan to include everyone over 65, some public health experts voiced concerns there won’t be enough shots available for the all-important second doses — which must be administer­ed within three to four weeks of the first dose, depending on the brand.

“Righting the ship by pushing out everything we’ve got is an unforced error,” Andrew Noymer, an infectious disease and public health expert at University of California, Irvine told the Bee. “The second dose won’t arrive on time.”

Sacramento County warned last week that most residents 65 and older — a group that numbers more than 200,000 — won’t be getting shots right away because they just don’t have the supply, the newspaper reported.

“We request patience as we work to navigate the rapidly changing landscape of vaccinatio­n best practices and availabili­ty,” county Public Health Officer Dr. Olivia Kasirye said in a statement.

Adding to concerns, Los Angeles County announced Saturday that it had detected its first case of a more transmissi­ble variant of COVID-19. It was identified in a man who recently spent time in the nation’s most populous county. The patient has traveled to Oregon, where he is isolating.

Although his is the first confirmed case of the variant, health officials believe it is already spreading in a county that surpassed 1 million coronaviru­s cases this weekend. While the new strain, first detected in the United Kingdom, does not appear to make people sicker, it spreads more easily, which could result in more infections, and with them, additional hospitaliz­ations in a region hit hard by the surge.

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