The Mercury News

More UK virus cases in SoCal

New COVID strain believed more contagious but may not cause more severe symptoms

- By Maggie Angst and Evan Webeck Staff writers

Just as California was beginning to see some hopeful signs of an alarming COVID-19 surge ebbing in some regions, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Monday that more cases of a highly contagious strain of the virus from the United Kingdom have been discovered in Southern California, a sign that it likely has been stealthily circulatin­g across the state.

After the first case in California was discovered in San Diego County last week, the total known has grown to six statewide — four in San Diego County and two in San Bernardino County — and one person infected with the mutated strain has been hospitaliz­ed, according to Newsom.

And with California sequencing between 5,000 and 10,000 virus samples each week, the governor said he anticipate­s there will be more new cases of the variant to report, possibly as soon as late Monday.

“We imagine, in fact one should just anticipate, that there will be others identified,” Newsom said, adding that he ex

“Because it is more rapidly transmitte­d, we want to stop it as fast as possible and double down on the number of people vaccinated.”

— George Rutherford, epidemiolo­gist at UC San Francisco

pected state officials to provide an update by late Tuesday on the testing underway to understand more comprehens­ively “what this strain looks like and what it’s been doing.”

The new strain is believed to be more contagious than the earlier variants but not to cause more severe symptoms or health conditions. In Britain, the new strain spread so fast it became the dominant form of the virus there in just three months, prompting new lockdown orders in the face of a dangerous surge and an overwhelme­d health care system.

Despite ongoing ge - nomic testing at the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub in partnershi­p with UC San Francisco, the new variant has not yet been found in the Bay A rea or any where outside of Southern California. But it’s unlikely to go undiscover­ed elsewhere here for long, Newsom

said.

“We do very comprehens­ive genomics testing here in California,” he added.

If officials learn the new strain has substantia­lly spread, the state will need to reconsider its plan of attack against the virus, such as administer­ing one dose of the vaccine instead of two for now to slow transmissi­on, said George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist at UC San Francisco.

Otherwise, rapid spread of the new strain will further overwhelm already strained health care facilities and result in even more deaths, he said.

Br itish of f icials la st week a nnounc ed t hey would prioritize par tly vaccinatin­g as many people as possible with the first shot over following up with second shots three or four weeks later. British officials last week announced they would prioritize partly vaccinatin­g as many people as possible with the first shot over following up with second shots three or four weeks later. The second shot adds

a measure of effectiven­ess and likely makes vaccinatio­nderived immunity more durable.

“There might be something to be said about pursuing this strategy,” Rutherford said. “Because it is more rapidly transmitte­d, we want to stop it as fast as possible and double down on the number of people vaccinated.”

New cases tied to the British strain come as California’s average daily COVID-19 case count has plateaued below a pre- Christmas peak, although the daily death toll and rate of tests coming back positive continue to swell.

On average over the past week, California has repor ted approximat­ely 35,760 new cases per day, almost 15% fewer than two weeks ago. However, during that same time frame, the seven- day rate of positive test results has risen slightly by two-tenths of a point to 13.5%.

The past seven days in California have been the pandemic’s deadliest, and some public health experts

believe the worst is yet to come as new cases and hospitaliz­ations tied to illadvised holiday gatherings are tallied.

“This week is critical in terms of better understand­ing where we are and if we’re going to hit that surge on top of a surge on top of yet another surge,” Newsom said.

Some of the effects are already being seen.

Sa nt a C la ra C ount y Counsel James Williams said ambula nces have waited up to seven hours several times in the last week to bring patients into a hospital emergency room.

“It’s a symptom of what’s happening in the emergency department­s,” Williams said, referring to a surge in COVID-19 patients that has left hospitals scrambling for beds and health care workers to staff them.

When asked why ambulances are not taking people elsewhere, even outside the county, rather than waiting so long, Williams pointed out hospitals

across the entire region are facing similar challenges.

Public health experts such as Rutherford hope the state’s vaccine rollout, particular­ly to patients in skilled nursing facilities, will start to reduce the influx of infected people who require hospital stays.

As of Monday, California has received about 1.29 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, but only about 454,000 have been distribute­d. It is unclear whether the sluggish inoculatio­n campaign is due to health care workers and patients in skilled nursing facilities turning down a vaccine or to other planning impediment­s.

California Health and Human Ser vices Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said Monday that state officials are working with county health department­s and health care systems to develop a more detailed blueprint to address inefficien­cies and expedite the distributi­on of vaccines.

Under the state’s proposed vaccinatio­n plan that is expected to be publicly released on Wednesday, next up in the state’s vaccine campaign will be California­ns 75 years and older as well as some essential workers in three categories — education and child care, emergency services and high-priority essential businesses such as farming and grocery stores.

Follow ing them w ill come California­ns 65 years and older, incarcerat­ed individual­s, the homeless and workers in transporta­tion and logistics, the industrial, residentia­l and commercial sector, and critical manufactur­ing.

Newsom on Monday unveiled his proposal for the next tier, which would include people 50 years and older, those 16 to 64 years old with underlying medical conditions and additional sectors of essential workers. The state’s Drafting Guidelines Workgroup has yet to approve the specifics of this proposal.

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