Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Half of residents 16-and-older are now fully vaccinated

- By City News Service

Los Angeles County has reached the milestone of fully vaccinatin­g half of its population aged 16 and over against COVID-19, the public health director announced on Monday, but lagging rates among those aged 30 to 49 have made them the most likely to wind up hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 infections.

According to figures released Monday, nearly 4.2 million county residents have now received two doses of vaccine and are considered fully vaccinated.

“We can now proudly say that more than 50% of L.A. County residents 16 and older have received two doses of the vaccine,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said. “It is truly thrilling to see us reach this landmark, and I want to thank everyone who’s done their part to get us to this point.”

Since they’ve been eligible for shots longer, the 65-plus age group has the highest rate of vaccinatio­ns, at 72%. Among those aged 16-17, the rate is 28%, while the 16-64 group is at 46%.

While improvemen­ts continue to be made in each group, Ferrer noted that “lower vaccinatio­n rates in younger age groups means not only are people in those age groups more likely to transmit COVID, but they’re also more likely to suffer its severe consequenc­es.”

According to Ferrer, between April 1 and May 15, the 30-49 age group had the highest number of people hospitaliz­ed due to COVID-19, at more than 600.

“This is the first time over the course of the pandemic that we’ve seen this happen,” she said. “Before April, this age group consistent­ly saw lower hospitaliz­ation rates when compared to other age groups. If we look at a different six-week period, last October pre-surge, we can see a stark difference. Even when our numbers were not at their highest, older people have always been more likely to be hospitaliz­ed.”

She attributed the sudden change to a “gap in protection.”

“Older adults, particular­ly those over 65, are now protected by their

high vaccinatio­n rates,” she said. “Children and young adults may be protected by virtue both of their youth and by the masking requiremen­ts in place at their schools. But people in the middle group — many of them are workers and people responsibl­e for the care of others — are not as wellprotec­ted by either of these factors. And if they’re not vaccinated, they are highly likely to end up with a COVID infection, and unfortunat­ely, as we see, disproport­ionately likely to end up in the hospitals.”

She said the county is continuing to press the need for more people to get vaccinated, but overall demand for the shots continues to dwindle, with only about 118,000 doses administer­ed across the county population for the week that ended Friday.

“This is an underestim­ate of the true number because we have incomplete data for these dates and we don’t have data from the weekend,” she said. “But nonetheles­s, it’s clear that we need more folks coming in for the first-dose appointmen­ts in order to create the conditions that can sustain our full reopening in a few weeks.”

In hopes of getting more people to vaccinatio­n sites, the county plans to offer more incentives, with prizes such as gift cards and sports tickets likely to be offered in coming weeks.

Among cities with independen­t health department­s: Long Beach reported eight new cases since Friday, for a total of 53,295; its death toll remained at 935. Pasadena reported one new case, its total inching up to 11,285; the city’s death toll remained 346.

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