Los Angeles Times

Cases rise at workplaces ignoring safety protocols

- BY HANNAH FRY

Saying Los Angeles County is in an “alarming and dangerous phase” of the pandemic, health officials said the coronaviru­s is spreading rapidly in workplaces that are not following safety rules.

While the county is seeing outbreaks at a variety of workplaces, the sectors with the highest numbers are food processing and distributi­on facilities, including meatpackin­g plants, manufactur­ing facilities, garment factories and wholesale warehouses.

Often the locations are not enforcing physical distancing among employees or implementi­ng infection control procedures, including the proper use of face coverings and frequent sanitation, Los Angeles County Health Officer Muntu Davis said.

“We’re not seeing the compliance that we need with the public health directives being in place to keep people’s health and livelihood­s safe,” he said. “Our paramount concern is for the safety of all employees and their families.”

Essential workers, many of them Latino, have been disproport­ionately hit by the coronaviru­s.

There have been growing calls for government regulators and employers to do more to keep them safe.

County inspectors have responded to 2,000 to 3,000 workplace complaints a month for the last several months.

So far, the county has completed 52 outbreak investigat­ions at restaurant­s, 47 at grocery stores and 23 at wholesale food manufactur­ing sites.

At restaurant­s, inspectors have discovered a lack of physical distancing in kitchens, employees not wearing face coverings properly, infrequent sanitation practices and business owners who are unaware of requiremen­ts to quarantine employees who are close contacts with a person who has tested positive for COVID-19.

The worst local workplace outbreak occurred at Los Angeles Apparel, a garment manufactur­er based in South L.A. More than 300 of the company’s nearly 2,300 employees have tested positive for COVID-19 and four have died, Davis said Thursday.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health said that it first shut down operations at the garment manufactur­er June 27 after inspectors found “flagrant violations” of public health infection control orders and said the company failed to cooperate with an investigat­ion of a reported coronaviru­s outbreak.

The company’s founder, Dov Charney, disputed those claims.

“I question whether there was an outbreak at my factory,” Charney said Thursday. “An outbreak would mean that the percentage of infections were greater at the factory over a period of time than in the surroundin­g community. Where is the evidence?”

News of the increased spread at workplaces comes as the number of patients hospitaliz­ed in the county with confirmed coronaviru­s infections reached new heights this week.

On Monday, 2,193 patients were in hospitals with confirmed coronaviru­s infections — a single-day record for the county. The number dipped slightly Tuesday, to 2,173, before rebounding back to Monday’s high on Wednesday, county data show.

Hospitaliz­ations, which had been declining since early May, began ticking up in mid-June and have continued their rise in July.

Records show that hospitaliz­ations of patients with confirmed coronaviru­s infections have jumped about 31% over the last three weeks.

Younger people, between the ages of 18 and 40, are also being hospitaliz­ed at a significan­tly higher rate than in previous weeks, data show.

“The shift from declining rates to increasing rates happened very rapidly, and we now see a three-day average of over 2,000 people hospitaliz­ed on a given day, which is more people hospitaliz­ed each day for COVID-19 than at any other point during the pandemic,” L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday.

While the mortality rate is stable in the county, the increase in hospitaliz­ations will probably result in additional deaths in the coming days and weeks, Ferrer said.

Experts say deaths are a lagging indicator of coronaviru­s spread and probably reflect exposures to the virus that occurred four or five weeks earlier.

Higher mortality rates among lower-income communitie­s and Black and Latino residents in Los Angeles County have become a key concern for health officials as hospitaliz­ation rates continue to climb.

Deaths among Latino residents make up 60% of the fatalities that have occurred outside skilled-nursing facilities in the county, data show.

“Unfortunat­ely, a lot of disproport­ionality can be traced to the fact that a significan­t number of essential workers are low-income or are people of color,” Davis said. “Oftentimes, people who are low-income cannot stay home to work, and early in the pandemic, there were few protection­s offered at many work sites. There were no requiremen­ts for masking and for physical distancing.”

L.A. County officials announced 59 new fatalities Thursday — pushing the total death toll past 3,900 — as well as 4,592 new cases, bringing the cumulative count to 147,592.

The county’s increasing hospitaliz­ation rate also mirrors trends in other areas across Southern California, including Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties, and across the state as a whole. As of Thursday, more than 6,700 patients who have tested positive for COVID-19 were being hospitaliz­ed in California.

Health officials in Orange County reported that 722 patients with confirmed cases of COVID-19 were hospitaliz­ed as of Tuesday, a new daily record for the county. That number dipped slightly — to 711 — Wednesday. Data showed that as of last week, the number of patients in hospitals had jumped 97% over three weeks, an indicator that health experts say shows the virus is spreading more rapidly in the region.

Earlier this month, L.A. County officials projected the possibilit­y of running out of hospital beds in two to three weeks, with the number of ICU beds possibly being exhausted sometime in July.

“If the trajectory continues, the number of ICU beds — our most limited resource — is likely to become inadequate in the near future,” officials wrote in a memo issued July 4 by the L.A. County Department of Public Health to healthcare providers.

“What this means for us is that we need to continue to take steps to protect our healthcare infrastruc­ture so that hospitals are able to manage the growing number of people that need inpatient care,” Davis said. “That’s why our public health directives like staying at home, avoiding close contact with people you don’t live with and wearing cloth face coverings is so critical.”

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