San Diego Union-Tribune

COUNTY SOUNDS ALARM AS CASES CREEP HIGHER

Health officials warn of dropping into lower tier as seven-day rate climbs from 6.8 to 7.8 over last week

- BY LYNDSAY WINKLEY

came prise San to press the Diego podium conference County during officials Friday a surwith a warning: The region’s

COVID-19 case rate is headed in the wrong direction, and residents need to be especially vigilant if we want to stay out of the state’s most-restrictiv­e purple tier.

The county’s case rate is a ref lection of how widespread the coronaviru­s is across San Diego.

Over the last week, officials have watched as that seven-day metric has creeped up from an average of 6.8 daily cases per 100,000 residents on Sunday to 7.8 daily cases on Friday. thing That’s higher bad than news, 7 because qualifies any- the region for the purple tier, but only if scores cross the threshold for two weeks in a row. If that happened, as it almost has a handful of times, many businesses that just started welcoming customers indoors would be ordered to move operations outside again.

“Today, we are here to sound the alarm that our actions matter, and we all must work together to keep San Diego County out of the purple tier,” said Dr.

Wilma Wooten, the county’s public health officer.

Although the upward trend isn’t looking good, county officials were hopeful on Friday that the region’s testing totals would be high enough to earn a downward adjustment that would help us cling to the red tier when the state runs its official case rate calculatio­ns on Tuesday.

According to the data available Friday, there were 1,617 confirmed coronaviru­s cases recorded from Oct. 4 through Oct. 10, the period the state will use to calculate the region’s case rate in its upcoming report. With a population of 3.3 million, that currently earns the county a case rate of 6.85 daily cases per 100,000 residents.

But that’s probably less than the number that will appear in

Tuesday’s report, because over the next two days, the county is likely to identify additional cases that will fall in that window. The state also adjusts raw case rate scores based on whether health providers in each county cumulative­ly performed more or less testing during the seven-day window than the median rate statewide. Although it’s possible the final calculatio­n will land us in the red tier, the situation “is just too close for comfort,” Wooten said.

So what can residents do to help keep case rate totals low? In addition to the oft-repeated advice of washing hands, distancing socially and wearing masks, people were asked to avoid crowded places and skip house and dinner parties. Employers were encouraged to allow workers to tele

commute.

And everyone was reminded to stay home while sick.

Wooten acknowledg­ed that these sorts of measures won’t impact the state’s next two case rate assessment­s. That’s because the dates the state will assess next Tuesday have already come and gone. And most of the dates that will be assessed the Tuesday after have also passed.

“It’s too late, as I stated, to have an impact on data that will be reported for this week, but, going forward, the actions and charges that we are asking you to take will help improve and have an impact on whether we go to the purple tier or not going forward,” Wooten said.

The region’s climbing case rate isn’t the only metric suggesting the coronaviru­s is spreading widely.

Over the last week, the county has investigat­ed 40 community-setting outbreaks, a total that included one additional outbreak reported on Friday. The daily case count also trended a bit higher with a total of 311 — about 3 percent of the 6,724 tests logged on Thursday. The region’s rolling 14-day average percentage of positives remains at 3 percent.

Three additional COVID-related deaths brought the regional total to 850. The victims were identified as a 61-year-old man, an 84-year-old man and a 93year-old woman, all with other underlying medical conditions.

Colleges across the county have also been providing updates about the case totals.

On Friday, Point Loma Nazarene University reported that 32 students and one employee had tested positive for the coronaviru­s. Twenty three of those cases are still active, including six who live off campus. There are 69 individual­s in quarantine and the college is waiting on the results of 100 additional tests. At UC San Diego, at least 109 students and 45 campus employees have tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s.

Far outstrippi­ng those totals, San Diego State University has seen COVID cases among 1,184 students, 14 faculty and staff members and 13 campus visitors.

 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Nursing students administer COVID-19 tests to students at the Point Loma Nazarene University gym on Thursday.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Nursing students administer COVID-19 tests to students at the Point Loma Nazarene University gym on Thursday.
 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Point Loma Nazarene University student Ellie Turk (left) gets a coronaviru­s test in the school gym from nursing student Nicole Orth (right) on Thursday.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Point Loma Nazarene University student Ellie Turk (left) gets a coronaviru­s test in the school gym from nursing student Nicole Orth (right) on Thursday.

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