The Ukiah Daily Journal

Cases surging after reopening

- By Barbara Feder Ostrov

A month after California’s reopening lifted most pandemic restrictio­ns, COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations are rising, worrying public health officials as they contend with the more infectious Delta variant and the lagging pace of vaccinatio­ns in some communitie­s.

Los Angeles County has drawn particular concern, with five straight days of more than 1,000 new cases, a five-fold increase from midJune.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on June 15 officially ended the state’s stay-at-home and mandatory mask orders affecting 40 million people, allowing most businesses to fully reopen. Vaccinated or not, many unmasked California­ns eagerly crowded into reopened stores, restaurant­s, churches and sporting events..

The fallout: On Wednesday, nearly 3,100 new COVID-19 cases were reported, compared to 700 on June 15. And the state’s test positivity rate — a measure of how much virus is circulatin­g in a community — jumped from 0.08% to 3%, according to the California Department of Public Health.

The actual numbers of cases remain small, however, compared to the peak of California’s devastatin­g winter surge, when new daily cases topped 50,000.

Case counts and testing results can fluctuate because of reporting delays. But public health officials in some areas have reported notable spikes in cases and hospitaliz­ations.

Between June 12 and July 12, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Orange counties saw the biggest jumps in the 7-day average of COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people, excluding very low-population counties, according to a Calmatters data analysis. San Francisco’s case rate nearly quadrupled to slightly more than six cases per 100,000 people. Los Angeles’ case rate nearly tripled, and Orange County’s more than doubled.

About 1,935 people were hospitaliz­ed statewide with confirmed or suspected cases on Wednesday, up about 54% compared to hospitaliz­ations on reopening day. Hospitaliz­ation rates spiked in Yolo, Marin, El Dorado, Sonoma and Alameda counties.

Nearly all of the new cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths have been seen in unvaccinat­ed people. About 40% of California­ns remain unvaccinat­ed.

Which raises the question: Did California reopen too soon?

Not necessaril­y, according to Dr. Peter Chin-hong, a University of California, San Francisco infectious disease specialist.

“I think we were a very good place in California when we reopened,” ChinHong told Calmatters. “And we had no idea what the Delta variant was going to do.”

California waited longer than most states to reopen fully, Chin-hong pointed out. “We always expected an increase in cases after that.”

California’s regional surges echo those around the nation, with COVID-19 cases rising by more than 50% this past week in 31 states and hot spots reemerging in Missouri, Arkansas and Florida.

Across California, the Delta variant as of July 7 has been found in 1,085 COVID-19 patients whose test results were geneticall­y sequenced, according to the state public health agency. But as a percentage of the state’s cases, it has grown incredibly fast, from just 2.2% of all tests sequenced in April to about 43% of all tests in June.

Chin-hong says it’s important to distinguis­h between infections and those that cause serious symptoms or death, because COVID-19 vaccines remain strongly protective against both, even against the Delta variant.

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