Lodi News-Sentinel

Newsom threatens more restrictio­ns

- By Luke Money, Rong-Gong Lin II and Alex Wiggleswor­th

LOS ANGELES — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday warned that California is again on the brink of a wider coronaviru­s stay-athome order as public health officials work desperatel­y to shore up a state hospital system that is contending with record numbers of COVID-19 patients.

Should the recent trends continue, officials warn, there’s a chance that the viciously resurgent pandemic could overwhelm aspects of the state health care system.

Of particular concern is the state’s intensive care capacity. Currently, about 75% of the state’s 7,733 ICU beds are occupied — with 1,812 of them filled by coronaviru­s patients.

Unless things change, the state could exhaust its existing ICU capacity by mid-December, according to projection­s Newsom presented.

“If these trends continue, we’re going to have to take much more dramatic — arguably drastic — actions,” he said during a briefing.

Those include “the potential for a stay-at-home order” for areas in the strictest purple tier of California’s coronaviru­s reopening road map, he said. Of the state’s 58 counties, 51 are in the purple tier.

Officials have watched with growing alarm as a recent recordsett­ing flood of new coronaviru­s cases has started to wash over the state’s hospital system.

There were 7,787 coronaviru­s patients hospitaliz­ed statewide as of Sunday, according to the latest available data. That’s the highest number recorded during the pandemic and an increase of roughly 89% from two weeks ago.

Even more sobering is that the current figures largely don’t include the recent deluge of infections — as COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations reflect cases that were identified two to three weeks earlier, according to Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s health and human services secretary.

Everything, Ghaly said Monday, “is on the table in terms of considerin­g how we effectivel­y guide the state through this,” though he said California is “working with our local partners to make sure what we do is both impactful and as time-limited as possible.”

The stakes for hospitals, like with intensive care units, are high. Newsom said about 59% of California’s hospital beds are currently occupied by patients need

ing care for all sorts of reasons — but that could rise to 78% by Christmas Eve.

Newsom emphasized that the alarming numbers would come to pass if “we just sit back and we are bystanders at this moment and we don’t subsequent­ly improve upon our existing efforts.”

“We intend to bend this proverbial curve and impact these statistics favorably,” he said.

The specter of additional state-level restrictio­ns comes as some counties are already taking additional steps aimed at tamping down transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s.

Los Angeles County’s strictest rules in months went into effect Monday, while Santa Clara County has ordered a mandatory 14day quarantine for virtually anyone coming into the county from more than 150 miles away — with some exceptions, such as for people traveling for medical treatment.

Officials in both counties have warned that unless they can halt the alarming coronaviru­s surge, which is unpreceden­ted in its scope and scale, hospitals could run out of beds in weeks.

“We have come to a place where our cases and our hospitaliz­ations are so high that we must do something to settle things down,” Dr. Sara Cody, the health officer for Santa Clara County, said Saturday. “We are now at a critical inflection point.”

In L.A. County, officials have rolled out what they refer to as a “targeted safer-athome order” — which closes public playground­s; places new capacity limits on retail stores, outdoor museums, galleries, zoos and aquariums; and prohibits all gatherings among people from different households, except for outdoor religious services and political demonstrat­ions.

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