Lodi News-Sentinel

COVID surge, other viruses prompt concerns for hospital space in Sac County

- Michael McGough

COVID-19 transmissi­on continues to surge in California, along with spikes in other respirator­y viruses, as state and local health officials urge indoor masking and additional precaution­s with end-of-year holidays approachin­g.

The statewide daily case rate jumped to 19.4 per 100,000 residents, the California Department of Public Health reported in a weekly update Thursday, up 34% compared to one week earlier and more than doubling since the start of November.

Positivity increased to 11.7%, up from 11.1% last week and more than double the 4.6% rate that began November.

CDPH on Thursday reported 4,387 COVIDposit­ive patients in hospital beds statewide, including 487 in intensive care units. Those figures are increases of 16% and 22%, respective­ly, in the past week; and up 176% and 155%, respective­ly, since the start of November.

Sacramento County had 200 COVID-19 patients in hospital beds, according to state data updated Thursday, the first time at or above that mark since early August. The county had dropped to as few as 77 coronaviru­s patients in early November. Sacramento’s latest figure includes 29 patients in ICUs, up from 10 as recently as Nov. 27.

The increases in infections and hospitaliz­ations come as subvariant­s of omicron known as BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 make up a growing share of cases.

The two BQ-family variants combined for 63% of cases nationwide, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a weekly update last Friday, up from 55% the previous week.

‘Tripledemi­c’ concerns as flu, COVID and RSV spike

Sacramento County health officer Dr. Olivia Kasirye said the latest COVID-19 numbers, while rising toward levels seen during last summer’s surge, are “much lower” relative to December 2021, when the original omicron variant BA.1 began to take hold.

At the peak of that surge, the county saw more than 650 concurrent­ly hospitaliz­ed with coronaviru­s in January.

However, “with flu and RSV (respirator­y syncytial virus), the numbers are much higher than what we were seeing last year,” she said.

“The hospitals are being impacted by the number of cases coming in” for all three viruses, Kasirye said on a Wednesday call with reporters. “Our request is that for people who have mild disease, they should stay away from the emergency room so that we keep those services for those who are really sick.”

Kasirye also urged people to wear masks in public, especially in crowded places and on public transporta­tion, and to get vaccinated and boosted when eligible.

State health leaders this week advised that while RSV numbers have started to taper off following a much earlier start than usual this year, COVID-19 and flu numbers are now rising quickly.

“Taken separately, these infections are manageable,” California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said in a news briefing. “But when they all come together, the difficulty posed to the (hospital) system is pretty extreme.”

El Dorado County this week confirmed its first flu death since February 2020 in a resident.

Yolo County health officials are urging mask use, recently replacing a color-coded sign campaign rolled out over summer to businesses, which focused on COVID-19 risk levels, with one that reflects transmissi­on rates for all respirator­y illnesses in circulatio­n. The signs are voluntary.

“This winter is the first in several years where we are seeing significan­t flu and RSV activity, in addition to COVID-19, so we are now making masking recommenda­tions based on all circulatin­g respirator­y viruses, not just on COVID,” Yolo County health officer Dr. Aimee Sisson said in a statement Tuesday.

“Wearing a high-quality mask indoors is a great way to protect yourself and others from respirator­y viruses like flu, RSV, and COVID-19.”

Masks required again in some California facilities

CDPH in late September loosened its indoor mask requiremen­t for non-health care congregate settings, which include jails, prisons and homeless or emergency shelters.

Under the new order, those facilities may make masking optional if their county is classified in the CDC’s “low” community level for COVID-19 danger. Indoor masking is required in counties within the “medium” or “high” community levels.

The four-county capital region of Sacramento, El Dorado, Placer and Yolo were all placed by the CDC into the “medium” community level last week, exiting the low level for the first time since CDPH changed the mask rules, due to increasing infection and hospitaliz­ation numbers.

This means masks are now required at all jails, prisons and shelters in the capital region.

Masks remain mandatory in health care settings, such as hospitals and nursing homes, throughout California regardless of CDC community level under state health orders.

Sacramento City Unified School District could return to an indoor mask requiremen­t if Sacramento County returns to the CDC’s high level, though it is unclear whether that may happen before the district adjourns Dec. 23 for winter break.

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