Los Angeles Times

State’s COVID deaths top 60,000

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money

SAN FRANCISCO — The COVID-19 death toll in California has surpassed 60,000, an alarming statistic that comes even as conditions in the state continue to improve.

California’s toll represents 10.7% of COVID-19 deaths nationwide. The state is home to about 12% of Americans.

Although California’s death toll is lower per capita than that of the other mostpopulo­us states, COVID-19 has hit some communitie­s particular­ly hard.

California’s lower-income Latino communitie­s — home to many essential workers who often live in crowded housing — have seen disproport­ionately high numbers of deaths, while affluent areas have seen lower numbers.

The 60,000 milestone in fatalities, recorded this weekend, comes as the state has achieved significan­t progress in slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Daily COVID-19 deaths and hospitaliz­ations have plummeted, and the state

has so far avoided the spring resurgence that has hit other parts of the country.

Beginning Thursday, California will make everyone 16 and older eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, bringing hope of further taming the coronaviru­s.

Some local government­s and health systems have moved even faster to open vaccine appointmen­ts.

City-run sites in Los Angeles this weekend began allowing anyone 16 and older to book vaccine appointmen­ts for openings as early as Tuesday.

However, health officials warned that supplies of vaccine will remain limited for at least two weeks and are counseling patience as people seek to book appointmen­ts.

Although California’s allocation­s of the PfizerBioN­Tech and Moderna vaccines are expected to remain relatively steady this week, the state — along with the rest of the nation — will see availabili­ty crater for the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Last week, 574,900 J&J doses were allocated to the Golden State. This week, that number will plummet 88% to 67,600, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The nosedive for Johnson & Johnson will drive down the size of the state’s federal allocation from the 2.4 million doses it received last week to 2 million this week and 1.9 million next week.

This would appear to fall far short of the rosier estimates shared more than two weeks ago, when the state announced plans to widely expand vaccine access — first to residents who are at least 50 years old, which began April 1, then to residents 16 and older starting Thursday.

Based on estimates at the time, officials said they expected California to be allocated 2.5 million first and second doses a week in the first half of April, and more than 3 million doses a week in the second half of the month.

Officials believe the rise in vaccinatio­ns has played a role in turning the tide of the pandemic just months after the state experience­d a devastatin­g autumn-and-winter surge.

And while some experts have criticized California for acting too slowly to impose a stay-at-home order as that surge worsened, the business

restrictio­ns imposed in much of the state in December and January have been credited with saving lives and protecting many California hospitals from tipping into the kind of catastroph­ic crowding faced by New York’s hospitals early in the pandemic.

California has the lowest cumulative per capita COVID-19 death rate of the

eight most populous states, according to a Times analysis of Johns Hopkins University data.

Besides California, the most populous states are Texas, Florida, New York, Illinois, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio and Georgia.

California has the 30thworst COVID-19 death rate on a per capita basis among the 50 states, the District of

Columbia and Puerto Rico.

California’s cumulative COVID-19 death rate is 153 per 100,000 residents. New Jersey and New York have the nation’s highest cumulative death rates, at 280 and 260, respective­ly, per 100,000 residents. If California had the same rate as New York, its COVID-19 death toll would exceed 101,000.

California has recently observed a dramatic slowing of the average number of COVID-19 deaths being reported daily.

On recent days, the state has reported an average of 105 to 120 deaths — the fewest since the autumnand-winter surge began. At its worst, in late January, California was recording as many as 562 deaths a day.

Over the weekend, California reported an average of 110 deaths a day during the previous seven days, a 14% decrease from the previous week.

The pandemic’s effect statewide has varied by region. Of California’s mostpopulo­us regions, Los Angeles County has fared the worst. For every 100,000 residents, L.A. County has recorded 233 deaths. If L.A. County were a state, it would have the seventh-highest death rate.

The San Francisco Bay Area has fared far better; for every 100,000 residents, the area has recorded 79 deaths. If the nine-county Bay Area were a state, it would have the 45th-highest cumulative COVID-19 death rate.

Cumulative­ly, counties in Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley have reported the highest per capita death rates in the state.

The 14 hardest-hit counties, in descending order, are Imperial, Los Angeles, Inyo, San Bernardino, Stanislaus, Riverside, San Joaquin, Tulare, Fresno, Merced, Kings, Orange, Madera and Kern.

A key contributi­ng factor to the higher death rates in Southern California is the large proportion of residents who work outside the home and live in crowded residences, making it easier for the coronaviru­s to spread once a member of a household becomes infected.

Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley generally have a higher social vulnerabil­ity than the Bay Area, meaning that factors such as poverty and crowded housing cause these communitie­s to fare worse in a disaster such as a pandemic.

Gov. Gavin Newsom faces a potential recall vote over his handling of the pandemic, with critics opposing restrictio­ns he ordered that closed a number of businesses in order to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Newsom has defended the measures as necessary to protect California­n lives and hospital operations and has projected optimism that the state’s economy will recover strongly.

A UCLA Anderson economic forecast predicts that the state’s economy will recover faster than that of the U.S. as a whole; one factor in that is the number of California-based companies that produce technology to support how people work and socialize from home.

A UC Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies poll conducted in late January found that the Bay Area was most supportive of Newsom’s stay-at-home orders, with 57% expressing trust in state officials in setting rules to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

L.A. County was split, with 48% expressing trust and 48% expressing mistrust. Majorities were distrustfu­l of Newsom’s leadership in other regions of the state, including San Diego County, Orange County, the Inland Empire and the Central Valley.

A more recent poll, conducted in mid-March by the Public Policy Institute of California, found that just 40% of likely voters are backing a recall of Newsom, and 56% want to retain him as governor.

Support for removing Newsom was lowest in the Bay Area, with 27% backing the idea; in L.A. County, 40% backed a recall, and 41% did so in San Diego and Orange counties.

There was more support for a recall in the Inland Empire, where 47% backed the idea, and the Central Valley, where 49% believe the governor should be replaced.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA’S COVID-19 death toll is lower per capita than that of the other most-populous states. Above, two nurses and a respirator­y therapist treat a patient at Sharp Chula Vista Medical Center in April 2020.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA’S COVID-19 death toll is lower per capita than that of the other most-populous states. Above, two nurses and a respirator­y therapist treat a patient at Sharp Chula Vista Medical Center in April 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States