Los Angeles Times

State’s virus toll tops 50,000

Previously uncounted deaths in L.A. County raise California’s total as variant fears rise.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Melissa Healy

California has surpassed 50,000 COVID-19 deaths, a tally that came as Los Angeles County reported a backlog of more than 800 deaths over the autumn-and-winter surge.

The count comes as daily coronaviru­s cases and COVID-19 deaths have dropped considerab­ly in recent weeks, although some scientists remain concerned about the potential spread of mutant variants that are more contagious and possibly more lethal. While California has the largest number of COVID-19 deaths of any state in the nation, it ranks 32nd among the 50 states and the District of Columbia for COVID-19 deaths per capita.

The backlog of 806 new COVID-19 deaths in L.A. County, which mostly occurred in December and

January, was discovered following extensive checks of death records, Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday.

“This was a period, as you all know, where very many deaths occurred across the county. And not all of them were reported to [the Department of] Public Health because of the volume of records.”

The county typically identifies COVID-19 deaths by daily reports from healthcare providers. But the county also does an audit of causes of death listed on death certificat­es, where the additional 806 were found.

“The 806 deaths being reported today reflect those COVID-associated deaths that occurred during the surge that were not reported to [the Department of] Public Health through the death report form, but they were identified subsequent­ly through our death certificat­e review, and we always do these reviews,” Ferrer said.

The 806 deaths account for about 8% of the new total of COVID-19 deaths in L.A. County in December and January, she added.

“It is heartbreak­ing to report on this large number of additional deaths associated with COVID-19. And it’s a devastatin­g reminder of the terrible toll the winter surge has taken on so many families across the county,” Ferrer said.

News of the bleak record came as officials were investigat­ing a cluster of four cases at USC, two of which are confirmed to be the more contagious and potentiall­y more deadly variant first identified in Britain, B.1.1.7.

The two other cases are still awaiting lab confirmati­on, Ferrer said.

“All of these cases were detected as part of USC’s routine testing and surveillan­ce program,” she said Wednesday. “The individual­s are doing well, and they’re in isolation. Close contacts have been identified, notified and they are in quarantine.”

Scientific research suggests that the currently available COVID-19 vaccines are effective against the U.K. variant.

“But with vaccine supply still very limited, the local transmissi­on of the potentiall­y more infectious U.K. variant underscore­s the need for every one of our residents to continue to use every tool we have to prevent transmissi­on,” Ferrer said, “including not gathering with people you don’t live with, and distancing and masking whenever you’re out of your home and around others.”

There are now 18 confirmed cases of the U.K. variant in L.A. County; more than 200 in California and more than 1,800 nationwide, with 45 states reporting cases.

Another variant of concern, first identified in South Africa, B.1.351, has not been identified in L.A. County, but has been identified in the Bay Area, which has the only two confirmed cases in California — one in Santa Clara County, and the other in Alameda County.

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