Albuquerque Journal

Did patio dining ban slow California surge?

- BY SOUMYA KARLAMANGL­A AND RONG-GONG LIN II LOS ANGELES TIMES (TNS)

Despite heated opposition and vows of resistance from some restaurant owners and elected officials, there is increasing evidence that California’s latest stay-athome order, including a ban on outdoor dining, worked to turn around a deadly surge of the coronaviru­s.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced last week that he was lifting the stay-athome order that had been in place in most of the state since early December in light of the state’s declining coronaviru­s case and hospitaliz­ation numbers.

After weeks of overwhelme­d hospitals and record death tolls, the improvemen­ts seemed sudden and surprising. But experts say they are the consequenc­e of changes that California­ns started to make two months ago.

In early December, California­ns began moving around their communitie­s at a rate 40% lower than what is typical — the lowest level since May — due to a combinatio­n of Newsom’s orders as well as a natural reaction to alarming case numbers and rhetoric from officials, said Ali Mokdad, an epidemiolo­gist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington.

In Los Angeles County, the stay-at-home orders and a ban on outdoor dining were followed by a drop in the transmissi­on rate — a measure known as “R” that reflects how many people a sick person on average infects — from 1.2 before the orders to 0.85 by early January. Anything above 1.0 means an outbreak will grow exponentia­lly.

In other words, within roughly two weeks of the new orders in late November, the county began to turn the corner. Because of the lag time between new infections and hospitaliz­ations, the effects of the stay-at-home orders would only become apparent a month later, in early January, when hospitaliz­ations finally began to decline.

“You did the right thing at the right time,” Mokdad said. “The winter is working against all of us, but at least you preempted a much bigger surge of cases by doing what you did.”

Cut hospitaliz­ations

California officials estimated that the state’s order — which prohibited nonessenti­al travel; banned outdoor social gatherings; and closed nail and hair salons, museums and outdoor dining — kept as many as 25,000 people from landing in the hospital with a severe case of COVID-19.

Scientists say that they can’t tease out which part of the order was most effective in turning the tide, but several leading public health experts interviewe­d by The Times agreed that the outdoor dining ban probably played a key role.

It has been by far the most controvers­ial restrictio­n, perhaps because indoor malls have remained open or because of Newsom’s infamous visit to the French Laundry, a pricey Napa Valley restaurant. Multiple lawsuits have been filed against L.A. County and Newsom related to the ban.

But epidemiolo­gists said prohibitin­g outdoor dining signaled to the public that the coronaviru­s storm was worsening while also eliminatin­g a real risk: While eating outdoors, patrons can’t keep their masks on, guests at the same table aren’t six feet apart, and they could spend more than an hour together — violating three basic tenets of risk reduction.

Amid complaints that the data are too thin on the dangers of outdoor dining, experts point out that such detailed data do not exist for diseases that have been around for much longer.

“We’re building the airplane while we’re flying,” said UC San Francisco epidemiolo­gist Dr. George Rutherford. “I think we need a little leeway in trying to protect the public from a disease that’s killed more people in 10 months than we lost in all of World War II.”

People confused

Outdoor dining resumed Friday in Los Angeles County, where the contentiou­s opposition to banning it began.

Once L.A. County enacted the ban Nov. 25, attorney Mark Geragos, who owns downtown L.A. restaurant Engine Co. No. 28, sued and called it “an irrational and unlawful overreach.”

L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer conceded that she had struggled to explain to the public how the risks of outdoor dining could be tolerated in October, when the prevalence of the virus was relatively low, but not in November, as it had become more widespread.

“I don’t blame people for being confused,” she said in an interview. “I do think it’s very hard on people.”

L.A. County’s orders essentiall­y became a model for a regional stay-at-home order that would begin to be imposed throughout most of the state during the week of Dec. 6. The success of those statewide orders reversed the state’s dangerous path and allowed them to be lifted last week, said California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly.

He said that three weeks after the interventi­on was put in place — even if “residents aren’t 100% compliant with it” — the curve began to flatten, a pattern straight out of a “COVID textbook.”

In response to criticism that there isn’t enough clear data on the risks of outdoor dining, Ghaly said that kind of knowledge “usually takes years to figure out” and is particular­ly challengin­g given the lags in data collection, imprecisio­n of contact-tracing informatio­n as well as asymptomat­ic transmissi­on of the virus.

33rd among states

While it recently marked its 40,000th COVID-19 death, California’s death rate ranks 33rd among the 50 states. Had California had the same death rate as Arizona — which has refused a statewide mask mandate and allows indoor dining and service at bars — its death toll would be more than 73,000.

Still, some worry that rules that are too strict may lead to extreme fatigue or even defiance among the public that ultimately undermines officials’ authority and could harm mental health.

Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious-disease physician at UC San Francisco who specialize­s in HIV treatment, said there was an “ache in my heart” when she heard that outdoor dining would close statewide, because she knew “how much people needed to see each other.”

“That was actually my first response as an infectious-disease doctor,” she said. “Asking people to just stay away from each other completely and mandating an abstinence-only approach is blunt and only effective if everyone follows those guidelines.”

Now that outdoor dining has reopened and the stayat-home order has lifted, many are watching closely to see whether cases begin to rise again.

UC San Francisco epidemiolo­gist Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo said she worries that reopening outdoor dining, though she believes it could be done safely, may send the wrong message.

“The concern for me … is that it will be read as, ‘Happy days are here again. Let’s all go out, because outdoor dining is open again,’” she said. “When, really … the cases are still really high. They’re coming down, but they’re still really high.”

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