Daily Breeze (Torrance)

As holiday weekend looms, L.A. County’s virus numbers continue to slide.

- By City News Service

Los Angeles County’s COVID-19 numbers continued to tumble Tuesday, a positive sign as the planned lifting of virus-related restrictio­ns across the state grows closer and another holiday weekend looms.

According to weekly figures released by the state, the county’s average daily rate of new COVID-19 infections fell to 0.9 per 100,000 residents, down from 1.2 per 100,000 residents last week. The continued decline leaves the county firmly anchored in the least-restrictiv­e yellow tier of the state’s Blueprint for a Safer Economy, which guides restrictio­ns on business activity and gatherings during the pandemic.

The county’s current testing-positivity rate also fell again, according to the state figures, dropping from 0.6% last week to 0.5% this week.

“The county continues to see progress in our metrics as our vaccinatio­n rate goes up,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement. “Vaccinatin­g as many residents as we can puts us in the strongest position possible when the risk of transmissi­on goes up with full reopenings in a few weeks. The most powerful

tool to keep cases and hospitaliz­ations down and end this pandemic as we know it are the vaccines.”

Ferrer announced Monday that 50% of the county’s population ages 16 and older now are fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

“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,” she said.

But vaccinatio­n demand has continued to dwindle, leaving significan­t gaps among ethnic groups, with vaccine rates among Black and Latino communitie­s lagging behind those of White and Asian residents.

Vaccinatio­n rates also are lagging among younger residents, although they have been eligible shots for less time than their 65-andolder counterpar­ts.

The county reported Monday that for the first time, residents ages 30-49 had the highest number of people hospitaliz­ed of any age group during the sixweek period from April 1 to May 17. Traditiona­lly, older residents have dominated hospitaliz­ation numbers.

But vaccinatio­n rates among older residents are much higher, with the 65plus age group vaccinated at a rate of 72%. That compares with 46% for residents 16-64.

Though 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.”

“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 well-protected 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.”

County officials are urging as many people as possible to get vaccinated ahead of June 15, when the state and county will lift the vast majority of COVID-19 restrictio­ns, including all capacity limits and physical distancing requiremen­ts.

Ferrer on Monday also urged unvaccinat­ed residents to exercise caution over the upcoming Memorial Day weekend. Holiday weekends have been problemati­c during the pandemic, with residents often shunning health protocols to gather with friends and families.

Ferrer again noted that getting fully vaccinated provides the benefit of being able to gather in groups and more freely engage in social activities.

The county on Tuesday reported another 10 COVID-19 deaths, increasing the countywide death toll to 24,184.

An additional 191 new cases also were announced by the county, lifting the cumulative total from throughout the pandemic to 1,239,093.

In cities operating their own health department­s: Long Beach’s death toll ticked up by two, to 937; the city reported 33 more cases, for a total of 53,328. Pasadena reported just one new case, for a total of 11,286; the city’s death toll remained 346.

According to state figures, there were 320 people hospitaliz­ed in the county due to COVID-19 as of Tuesday, down from 325 on Monday. There were 68 people in intensive care, down from 73 on Sunday.

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. Ferrer said the giveaways will be announced through the county’s social media platforms.

Over the weekend, people over age 18 who got vaccinated at county- or city-run sites were given a chance to win Lakers season tickets. Ferrer said sports teams and local event venues are chipping in to provide additional incentives in hopes of boosting vaccinatio­n rates ahead of the planned June 15 lifting of the bulk of COVID-19 restrictio­ns across California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States