The Ukiah Daily Journal

Cases slow as deaths rise

Full effects of gatherings not clear yet

- By Evan Webeck

California’s coronaviru­s cases have slowed since Christmas, but testing delays coupled with the average timeline of infection mean the impact of holiday gatherings likely may not be fully realized until next week.

For over a week now, though, California’s average daily case count has plateaued below its pre- Christmas peak. On Sunday,

counties combined to report 22,141 new cases of COVID-19 and 93 deaths from the virus, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on. But while new cases have remained about flat, the rate of tests to come back positive in the state has spiked near a new high, and its daily death toll continues to swell.

On average over the past week, California is reporting approximat­ely 35,760 new cases per day, almost 15% fewer than two weeks ago, the day before Christmas Eve. However, at 13.5%, its seven- day positivity rate is two-tenths of a point higher than it was two weeks ago. And, with nearly 2,350 fatalities over the past week — an average of about 335 per day, or about one every four minutes — the past seven days in California have also been its deadliest of the pandemic. The average day brings as many fatalities now as the average week for much of November, though they continue to come disproport­ionately in Los Angeles and the rest of Southern California.

Of the 93 statewide fatalities Sunday, 91 came in Los Angeles County; the other two occurred just east in San Bernardino County.

Locally in Lake County, the health department reported the total case count was inching closer to 2,000. As of press time Monday, the department’s website showed a total of 1,998 cases and one more recent death totaling 24. 1,662 cases had recovered but 312 were shown to be still active and there were 16 currently hospitaliz­ed.

Over the past week, more than one in every two deaths in California has occurred in Los Angeles County, which has mounted a weekly death toll of nearly 1,300 — a number over six times greater than the weekly total in the Bay Area, despite only a 25% difference in their population­s. In the Bay Area, an average of about 30 people died from COVID-19 each day in the past week — about 9% more than two weeks ago — while in Los Angeles County, there was an average of 184 deaths per day over the past week, a 123% spike in the past two weeks.

Throughout Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley, hospitals continued to report zero capacity in their intensive care units and had entered their third week of enlisting surge beds to accommodat­e the influx of COVID-19 patients. In the Bay Area, capacity had recovered slightly from a low of 6.5% late last week to 8.4%, as of Sunday, but approachin­g its first evaluation date, the region was still well short of the state-mandated 15% capacity threshold. If, on Friday, the state projects the region to have at least 15% of its ICU beds available in four weeks, the region would be eligible to exit the regional stay-athome order.

Statewide, the rate of new COVID-19 patients entering hospitals has also slowed since Christmas. Since recording its 20,000th active patient last Monday, California has admitted a net of 300 new COVID-POSItive patients over the following five days, fewer than the average daily increase two weeks ago. In the seven days since Christmas, California’s active hospitaliz­ations have grown by 9%, compared to a 15% rate the week leading up to the holiday and 32% in the seven days prior to that.

As of Sunday, there were 20,690 Covid-positive patients hospitaliz­ed across California, including 4,509 in the ICUS, both record highs for the state. According to the COVID Tracking Project, no state at any point of the pandemic has reported more hospitaliz­ed cases than California is currently, but there were more intensive- care patients in New York during its spring outbreak. Even when accounting for its massive population, California has more COVID-19 patients currently hospitaliz­ed per capita than all but three other states: Arizona, Nevada and Alabama.

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