Los Angeles Times

Health officials hopeful

L.A. County’s COVID surge may have crested

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money

Just weeks ago, Los Angeles County’s hospitals were overwhelme­d and on the brink of a worst-case catastroph­ic scenario, with plans ready if doctors needed to ration healthcare.

But with the region now in its fourth week of declining hospitaliz­ations, it was clear Wednesday that the county was decisively on its way out of its third surge of the pandemic, its deadliest yet.

Yes, hospitals are still under pressure — scheduled surgeries are still suspended, and there’s still a shortage of medical staff, with hospitals relying on nurses drafted from clinics, contract agencies and the federal and state government­s.

L.A. County’s hospitals are still under great strain, with nearly three times as many COVID-19 patients as it did during the peak of the summer wave, and the state has opened up two surge hospitals — in Sun Valley and Hawaiian Gardens — that have been used to relieve the strain on other facilities.

And conditions could still worsen, given the rise of mutant variants of the coronaviru­s circulatin­g in California, one of which is believed to be more contagious and deadlier than the convention­al variety.

That variant, first identified in Britain in September, is rapidly spreading in the U.S. and could become the dominant variety of the coronaviru­s by March, accord

ing to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Local officials warn that the mutant strain has the potential of triggering a fourth wave of the pandemic later this winter if people stop wearing masks, stop practicing physical distancing and hold large, crowded Super Bowl parties, much as they did for the NBA Finals and World Series that fueled the autumn-and-winter surge.

Yet L.A. County health officials this week were clearly relieved that they had managed to avoid a northern Italy- or New York City-style disaster in the hospitals from the third surge of the pandemic, the worst by far.

There were no hospitals in a declared state of internal disaster, a change from weeks ago. No hospitals have been forced to formally declare to county officials they were providing “crisis standards of care,” which includes being so overwhelme­d that doctors would be forced to decide which patients would receive the most aggressive lifesaving treatment and which patients would receive only palliative care as they died.

At the worst of the crisis, virtually all hospitals were forced to divert some ambulances away on a daily basis; now fewer than half need to do so any given day, Dr. Christina Ghaly, the L.A. County health services director, said.

“The case numbers are down. The hospitaliz­ations are down,” Ghaly said Tuesday. To be sure, it will take time for the number of people in hospitals to decline, she added. “But [the numbers] are absolutely heading in the right direction.”

The number of new patients hospitaliz­ed each day with COVID-19 in L.A. County is now about 500 — much better than the peak of about 800 a day earlier this month, but still far worse than the summer peak of 250 new hospitaliz­ations a day, according to data Ghaly presented at a briefing Wednesday.

L.A. County is now averaging about 7,600 new cases a day over the past week — far better than the 15,100 average recorded for the seven-day period that ended Jan. 13, according to a Times analysis. The daily case rate, however, is still much worse than what was observed in mid-October, when fewer than 1,000 were recorded on average.

Daily COVID-19 deaths are still expected to remain high for a couple more weeks. On Wednesday, 301 more COVID-19 deaths were tallied in L.A. County, the second-highest single-day tally on record, just below the high of 318 deaths recorded on Jan. 8 and Jan. 12. L.A. County is averaging 214 COVID-19 deaths a day over a weekly period, an improvemen­t over the record average of 241 deaths for the seven-day period that ended Jan. 14.

The trend is reassuring, “so I do think that it’s appropriat­e at this point to start loosening the restrictio­ns,” Ghaly said.

L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said she’s pleased and grateful for all the work that so many L.A. County residents have done to stay at home as much as possible and wear masks. But, she warned, “we do need to move through the next few weeks with a lot of caution.”

“All of us know that at many other points [earlier in the pandemic] where we’ve been reopening our sectors, we in fact have seen a bump up in our cases. We can’t really afford that,” Ferrer said. “So I’m going to ask everybody to be extra diligent this time around, because our case numbers are still much higher than they’ve ever been before — except for the month of December and January.”

Compliance with health orders will be key, and health inspectors will be out and ready to issue citations if there are any violations, Ferrer said.

Her warnings were echoed by L.A. County supervisor­s, who, like health officials, are eager to avoid a backslidin­g of the pandemic that would probably force a new round of business closures.

“As restaurant­s are allowed to reopen or nail salons — if you are in a highrisk category and you have not been vaccinated, you need to continue to take all precaution­s, especially knowing that the numbers are still somewhat high, and that we’re not out of the woods,” Supervisor Kathryn Barger said. “We cannot let our guard down.”

Vaccinatio­ns alone won’t be enough, Barger said, and urged people to continue wearing masks, practicing physical distancing, and limiting contact with large crowds.

Epidemiolo­gists credit the cumulative effects of the outdoor dining ban and the stay-at-home order for blunting the worst impacts of the surge.

In the end, it took roughly two months for the orders to have convincing­ly turned the surge around, giving officials confidence to reopen businesses.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? NURSE Rebekah Park works with COVID-19 patients at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills. L.A. County public health officials say COVID case numbers and hospitaliz­ations are heading downward.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times NURSE Rebekah Park works with COVID-19 patients at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills. L.A. County public health officials say COVID case numbers and hospitaliz­ations are heading downward.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States