Los Angeles Times

STATE’S ACTIONS APPEAR TO HAVE HELPED

Compared with N.Y., California’s pace of fatalities has been low, aided by swift closures and car-centric sprawl.

- By James Rainey and Soumya Karlamangl­a

California’s relatively quick action to close businesses and order residents to stay home has tamped down the coronaviru­s pandemic and left many hospitals largely empty, waiting for a surge that has yet to come.

The initial success of the unpreceden­ted shutdown of schools, businesses and other institutio­ns has pleased experts and public health officials, prompting calls to keep the restrictio­ns in place, at least into May, to help cement the progress.

By late Friday, California had reported 598 deaths over 2 1⁄2 months, fewer than New York experience­d in a single day Wednesday, when 799 in the Empire State died from COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus. California has averaged just less than 45 deaths per day over the last week, with no surge in fatalities.

New York became the nation’s epicenter of the disease because of several factors. The virus arrived there earlier than elsewhere and in more locations; it is the densest U.S. city; it depends more on public transporta­tion, putting people close to one another; and it was behind California and Washington state in imposing restrictio­ns on public movement, said Nicholas Jewell, a UC Berkeley biostatist­ician.

Jewell and his daughter, Britta, an infectious-disease

epidemiolo­gist in London, created a model of the pathogen that showed the timing of social distancing orders played a critical role in controllin­g the number of deaths from the contagion.

“Just putting those controls in place a single day earlier makes a huge, huge difference in the growth rates,” Nicholas Jewell said. “And two days earlier makes an even bigger difference.”

Seven counties in the San Francisco Bay Area ordered residents to “shelter in place” and nonessenti­al businesses to close at midnight on March 16, a day when the number of coronaviru­s deaths in California doubled from six to 12. Three days later, Gov. Gavin Newsom extended the order to the entire state, with the total death toll at 19.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo made a similar order on March 20, but it did not take effect until March 22 at 8 p.m. By then, his state already had recorded 43 coronaviru­s deaths. That action still preceded lockdowns across much of the nation. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis didn’t impose a stayat-home order until April 1.

In California, the effect of the early order appears pronounced. San Francisco had recorded 13 deaths through Thursday, adding one to three additional victims per day over the last week. Sacramento has counted 24 deaths. Orange County has not seen its death toll of 17 increase for three days.

And, after emerging as an early hotbed of the illness, Santa Clara County had totaled 50 deaths through Thursday, an increase of 11 in one week.

The state’s most populous county, Los Angeles, continued to record the biggest share of fatalities, with a total of 244 as of Friday. But the average of 22 deaths per day over the previous week included no notable surges.

“Physical distancing is working. It has worked to date and it is working now, and it is important that that physical distancing remain in place in order to reduce not just the strain on the hospital system, but more importantl­y the overall number of infections,” said Dr. Christina Ghaly, director of the L.A. County Department of Health Services. “It is absolutely the single most important weapon that we have in our arsenal to fight the virus.”

The early action appeared evident in the empty hallways and wards of hospitals around California.

Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Westwood has been has been unusually quiet, said an attending physician who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. Few new patients have been admitted.

“It’s almost like ominous,” he said. “The volume has been the lowest it’s been ever.”

There are 41 COVID-19 patients admitted to the hospital, a figure that appears to have plateaued in recent days, according to the university’s website. The doctor said he was encouraged by the state numbers but remained anxious.

“Are we just waiting for the peak?” he asked.

There had been a “high panic” about a month ago, as doctors and nurses watched television news accounts of overflowin­g wards in Italy, said the UCLA physician, adding: “Now it’s more like being scared to admit a little bit of confidence, maybe telling everyone … we’ve actually achieved something. We won’t admit to ourselves that we’re out of the woods immediatel­y, until late May.”

The view from a Northern California hospital looked similar.

An emergency room nurse at Highland Hospital in Oakland said she had never seen her hospital so empty. The trauma center is typically one of the busiest in the state, with an emergency room that can have wait times as long as 15 hours, said the nurse, Kennedy Fleischaue­r.

“We just are bursting at the seams and we’re always that way, so to have weeks go by when nobody is there, it’s really weird, it’s really unnerving,” Fleischaue­r said. “It’s eerily not busy.”

The quiet has proved a blessing, allowing the hospital more time to assemble protective equipment for doctors, nurses and other workers.

“Because of that I think there’s been a really big kind of like surge in confidence,” Fleischaue­r said, “almost like, ‘Now we’re ready, we’re ready to handle this.’ ”

Doctors around the state still worry that the virus could get a foothold in nursing homes, prisons or among the teeming homeless population in places like Los Angeles’

skid row, and say the early success should not encourage complacenc­y.

“The positive news is that we seem to be tamping this down and our peak might be a week away,” said Berkeley’s Jewell. “But we’ll still have to wait three or four weeks after the peak to get back to where we were before the shutdown went in place.”

That timeline would suggest a potential reopening of some businesses and other facilities roughly a week into May.

“There will be political pressure to release things quickly; but epidemiolo­gically, you need to wait longer if you want to control the timing of a second wave,” Jewell said.

Los Angeles County health officials on Friday extended the end date of their stay-at-home restrictio­ns from April 19 to at least May 15 and said residents should do even more to rein in their public activities.

They advised, in particular, reducing trips to grocery stores, to curtail the spread of the virus, which first emerged publicly in California in January.

Emergency rooms had previously noted a slowdown in other types of cases, particular­ly car accident victims, because of a sharp decline in the number of people on the road. And a firm tracking influenza-like illnesses of all kinds, including COVID-19, showed case numbers falling sharply around March 19, the day Gov. Gavin Newsom issued his stay-at-home order.

Smart-thermomete­r maker Kinsa Health showed that on April 9 just 0.3% of Los Angeles County residents had fevers, as associated with both common flu and the coronaviru­s, compared with an expected 3.2% for that date.

It showed similar numbers for other counties in Southern California, all indicating low levels of observed illness, based on real-time data from the company’s network of smart thermomete­rs.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? ARCHBISHOP JOSE GOMEZ kneels during a Good Friday service with Father Brian Nuñez, center, and Father Raymont Medina at Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles. The service was held without parishione­rs.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ARCHBISHOP JOSE GOMEZ kneels during a Good Friday service with Father Brian Nuñez, center, and Father Raymont Medina at Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles. The service was held without parishione­rs.
 ?? John Minchillo Associated Press ?? SUBWAY PASSENGERS wear masks on a crowded car Tuesday in New York City. Among other factors, the city’s density and its reliance on public transit have made it the U.S. epicenter of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
John Minchillo Associated Press SUBWAY PASSENGERS wear masks on a crowded car Tuesday in New York City. Among other factors, the city’s density and its reliance on public transit have made it the U.S. epicenter of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? JULIANN and Butch Hartman hold signs of support last month in Calabasas, where they’ve lived 20 years.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times JULIANN and Butch Hartman hold signs of support last month in Calabasas, where they’ve lived 20 years.

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