Stamford Advocate

Once a model, Calif. struggles to tame COVID

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LOS ANGELES — Ambulances waited hours for openings to offload coronaviru­s patients. Overflow patients were moved to hospital hallways and gift shops, even a cafeteria. Refrigerat­ed trucks were on standby, ready to store the dead.

For months, California did many of the right things to avoid a catastroph­ic surge from the pandemic. But by the time Gov. Gavin Newsom said on Dec. 15 that 5,000 body bags were being distribute­d, it was clear that the nation’s most populous state had entered a new phase of the COVID-19 crisis.

Now infections have been racing out of control for weeks, and California remains at or near the top of the list of states with the most new cases per capita. It has routinely set new marks for infections and deaths, and began the new year reporting a record 585 deaths in a single day.

Experts say a variety of factors combined to wipe out the past efforts, which for much of the year held the virus to manageable levels. Cramped housing, travel and Thanksgivi­ng gatherings contribute­d to the spread, along with the public’s fatigue amid regulation­s that closed many schools and businesses and encouraged — or required — an isolated lifestyle.

Another factor could be a more contagious variant of the virus detected in Southern California, although it’s not clear yet how widespread that may be.

California’s woes have helped fuel the year-end U.S. infection spike and added urgency to the attempts to beat back the scourge that has killed more than 340,000 Americans. Even with vaccines becoming available, cases are almost certain to continue growing, and yet another surge is expected in the weeks after Christmas and New Year’s.

On Friday, the number of confirmed U.S. coronaviru­s cases surpassed 20 million, nearly twice as many as the No. 2 country, India, and nearly one-quarter of the more than 83 million cases globally, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

In California, the southern half of the state has seen the worst effects, from the agricultur­al San Joaquin Valley to the Mexico border. Hospitals are swamped with patients, and intensive care units have no more beds for COVID-19 patients. Makeshift wards are being set up in tents, arenas, classrooms and conference rooms. Some hospitals are having difficulty keeping up with the demand for oxygen.

Hospitaliz­ations statewide have gone up more than eightfold in two months and nearly tenfold in Los Angeles County. On Thursday, the total number of California deaths surpassed 25,000, joining only New York and Texas at that milestone.

“Most heartbreak­ing is that if we had done a better job of reducing transmissi­on of the virus, many of these deaths would not have happened,” said Barbara Ferrer, the county’s public health director, who has pleaded with people not to get together and worsen the spread.

Crowded houses and apartments are often cited as a source of spread, particular­ly in Los Angeles, which has some of the densest neighborho­ods in the U.S. Households in and around L.A. often have several generation­s — or multiple families — living under one roof. Those tend to be lowerincom­e areas where residents work essential jobs that can expose them to the virus at work or while commuting.

The socioecono­mic situation in L.A. County is “like the kindling,” said Paula Cannon, a professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at the University of Southern California. “And now we got to the stage where there was enough COVID out in the community that it lit the fire.”

Home to a quarter of the state’s 40 million residents, L.A. County has had 40 percent of the state’s deaths and a third of its 2.3 million cases. The virus has hit Latino and Black communitie­s harder.

Cannon said there’s a moral

imperative for people who can follow stay-home orders to help prevent spread that is harder to contain in other areas.

“What you can’t do is say to people, ‘Can you stop living in a house with eight other people, five of whom are working essential worker jobs?’” she said. “This is the structure that we can’t change in LA. This is, I think, contributi­ng to why our levels have suddenly got scarily high and looks like they’re going to keep going up and keep staying that way.”

In March, during the early days of the pandemic, Newsom was hailed for issuing the nation’s first state stay-home order.

The Democrat eased business restrictio­ns in May, and when a broader restart led to another surge, imposed more rules. In early December, with cases out of control, he issued a looser stay-home order. He also closed businesses such as barbershop­s and salons, halted restaurant dining and limited capacity in retail stores. The latest restrictio­ns apply everywhere except in rural Northern California.

But Dr. Lee Riley, an infectious diseases professor at the University of California at Berkeley, said that while the state managed to flatten the curve of rising cases, it never effectivel­y bent the curve downward to the point infections would die out.

When cases rose in June and July, California was never able to do enough contact tracing to isolate infected people and those they may have exposed before they spread the disease — often unwittingl­y — to others, he said. And public health directives were never adequately enforced.

“What California did was to maybe delay the peak,” Riley said. Infections “really just never got low enough. And we started lifting the restrictio­ns, and that just allowed the transmissi­ons to just continue to increase. We never really saw a real decline.”

California’s health secretary, Dr. Mark Ghaly, said if state and local leaders had not made difficult decisions early on that saved lives, the current surge might not be the worst the state has seen.

He acknowledg­ed the exhaustion many people feel after enduring months of disruption­s to their lives. Public health officials, he said, need to find a way to reach people who have given up or not followed rules on social distancing and masks.

Across California, local officials have reminded people that the fate of the virus lies in their behavior and asked for one more round of shared sacrifice. They reminded people that activities that were safe earlier this year are now risky as the virus becomes more widespread.

“You can practice safety and low-risk behavior from March to October. But all that is erased. Nothing matters except what you are doing to fight the virus right now,” said Corinne McDanielsD­avidson, director of the Institute for Public Health at San Diego State University. “This pandemic is an ultra-marathon. In our culture, we are used to sprints.”

 ?? John Antczak / Associated Press ?? Roses bloom outside the unusually quiet Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on New Year’s Day after the traditiona­l Rose Bowl NCAA football game was moved to Texas, and the Rose Parade was canceled due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
John Antczak / Associated Press Roses bloom outside the unusually quiet Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on New Year’s Day after the traditiona­l Rose Bowl NCAA football game was moved to Texas, and the Rose Parade was canceled due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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