Daily Democrat (Woodland)

State breaks death record; other metrics improving

- By Evan Webeck

While California’s active hospitaliz­ations from COVID-19 fell to their lowest point since the calendar turned to 2021, the state on Tuesday recorded its most deaths and its fourth-most new cases on any single day of the pandemic, as many counties caught up on reporting from the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend.

The large tallies on Tuesday had little effect on the daily averages over the past week, which remained lower than their respective peaks but still substantia­lly higher than any time prior to December. With 57,397 new cases and 700 fatalities reported Tuesday, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on, California is averaging approximat­ely 36,600 cases and 473 deaths per day over the past week. But the state is trending in the right direction, with fewer cases than two weeks ago and its lowest weekly positivity rate since the beginning of December, falling to 9.9% Tuesday.

In Yolo County, there were 10,316 cases reported as of Tuesday night, which was 228 higher than reported a day earlier. However, the death rate remained unchanged at 131. The number of ICU beds available, meanwhile, was “zero.”

Woodland City Manager Ken Hiatt told the City Council Tuesday night that he “never thought I would be thankful to be back in the purple tier, but here we are.”

Hiatt acknowledg­ed, however, that “we’re not likely to be heading toward the next tier, which is the red tier, until early February.”

Hiatt said hospital capacity remains critical but that the local economy is “opening back up a little bit.”

He also told the council that Woodland is working with representa­tives from Yolo County to better coordinate vaccinatio­n now that the vaccine is becoming available — even if in limited quantities — which are about two-thirds of what is necessary.

On the “funding front,” he added, there is “renewed optimism” now that the new stimulus package has been passed and that more may be on the way under the new Joseph Biden presidency.

To that, Councilman Rich Lansburgh openly wondered “if there is something we” as a city can do to help county health officials “improve our allotment of the vaccine.”

Hiatt said he would reach out to see if something could be done.

“I should put my thumbs up,” agreed Stallard. “Although we’re still deep in the woods we’re now in a better position so whatever surge we were in may now be diminishin­g.”

Hospitals are also treating the fewest California­ns with severe cases of COVID-19 in more than three weeks — since Dec. 27 — though there were still 20,062 COVID-positive patients in hospitals around the state on Monday. The active total has declined about 8.5% since its peak nearly two weeks ago but remains higher than any time prior to Christmas.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s Secretary of Health and Human Services, said there was “good news, demonstrat­ing we are seeing some reduction in transmissi­on.” While there may be a small increase in hospitaliz­ations from its low on Monday, Ghaly said, “recognizin­g we did see some increase in cases, but by the end of the month we’re hoping we’re at a humber even lower than where we are now.”

Still, hospitals remain squeezed for space. In the Bay Area, intensive-care capacity increased to 7.4% on Tuesday, but that was still well below the state-mandated 15% threshold to exit the regional stay-at-home order. In Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley, hospitals have been operating in surge capacity for over a month.

In the past two weeks, the average daily death counts in Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley have grown by 35% and 65%, respective­ly, while deaths have remained flat or fallen in the state’s other three regions.

While a small sample of counties in Southern California continued to account for an outsized portion of the fatalities on Tuesday, it was a deadly day in many parts of the state. Of the 700 deaths reported Tuesday, 186 came in Los Angeles County, 128 in Riverside County and 110 in Orange County — 60% of the statewide total between three counties.

But 29 of the state’s 58 counties added to their death tolls Tuesday, including seven in the Bay Area, led by Santa Clara County, which reported 33 fatalities, pushing its cumulative total over 1,100. In San Mateo County, the cumulative death toll grew over 300 with 15 new fatalities on Tuesday, while Alameda and Sonoma counties reported six apiece. Marin, Napa and Solano also added to their death tolls.

The 700 deaths reported in California on Tuesday were its most of any single day of the pandemic but represents multiple days of reporting for many counties. Nonetheles­s, California’s five deadliest reporting days have all come since the new year, and January has already been its deadliest month of the pandemic.

In Yolo County, there were 10,316 cases reported as of Tuesday night, which was 228 higher than reported a day earlier. However, the death rate remained unchanged at 131. The number of ICU beds available, meanwhile, was “zero.”

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