Los Angeles Times

O.C.’s positive test rate up

The numbers are worse in the neediest areas, and that could spell trouble for all

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money

The rate at which coronaviru­s tests are coming back positive has fallen in the last week in Los Angeles County but is expected to rise further in Orange County.

In Los Angeles County, the so-called positivity rate is 4.4%, Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said, a decrease from the previous week, when the positive test rate was 6.6%.

But in Orange County, the test positivity rate was 8.3%, said Dr. Regina Chinsio-Kwong, Orange County deputy health officer. And in a sign of potential trouble, the positivity rate is rising in the neediest areas of the county, and was 8.9% on Wednesday, up from 8.6% the day before.

Because the test positivity rate is rising in lower income areas, “my concern is that we’re going to continue to see the adjusted case rate increase,” Chinsio-Kwong said. “Usually, when you have more positivity, there’s more spread of the illness to others in the community.

“We do expect and anticipate that positivity [rates] will continue to rise,” she said. “Really, everybody in our community ... every ZIP Code, needs to take precaution.”

Chinsio-Kwong said she hoped the latest data would cause more residents to wear masks. There is a sizable anti-mask sentiment in Orange County, and a controvers­y over a local order to wear masks last year resulted in the resignatio­n of the Orange County health officer. Los Angeles County, on the other hand, is one of the few counties in Southern California this summer to require masks in indoor public settings.

“We are hoping that

[O.C., this informatio­n is informing people to make the decision to really protect themselves and their loved ones and to mask up, especially in public areas indoors,” Chinsio-Kwong said. “And if you’re in crowded areas outdoors ... you should consider wearing a mask.”

Both counties have comparable vaccinatio­n rates: 64.2% of residents of all ages in Orange County have received at least one shot, while 63.1% of L.A. County residents have also received at least one dose.

Still, improvemen­ts are especially needed in certain areas. In Orange County, “San Clemente, Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Newport [Beach] all need to work on their vaccinatio­n rates,” Chinsio-Kwong said.

Officials in Orange County expressed continued concern about the trajectory of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations in California’s third most populous county.

There continue to be increases in the amount of time ambulances are waiting to drop off patients at emergency department­s, as well as the number of hospitals requesting that ambulances be diverted to neighborin­g emergency rooms because they’re already crowded, said Dr. Carl Schultz, medical director for the Orange County Emergency Medical Services Division.

The requests to divert ambulance patients from hospitals was equivalent to 25% of Orange County’s hospitals being closed over a 24hour period, Schultz said.

Nine Orange County hospitals recently reported that it was taking more than an

hour for many patients to be offloaded from ambulances to emergency rooms, Schultz said.

“So the trend is ... not good. It’s continuing to slowly get worse,” Schultz said. “It’s a steady increase, and we’re starting to make plans for what we will do if this doesn’t abate.

“We now really have to start thinking about what are we going to do if it doesn’t get any better.”

For now, however, the level of overcrowdi­ng means that people with minor injuries and illnesses must wait longer to receive care. But so far, Schultz said, Orange County’s hospitals are still able to provide critically ill people prompt attention.

Hospital crowding is still not as bad as it was last winter, Schultz said. And Orange County is not in a position where officials are urging hospitals to cancel elective, or scheduled, surgeries,

something that is either being done or urged by officials in harder hit states such as Florida and Texas.

“We are a long ways from that,” Schultz said. “One of the things that might more likely happen if things got worse is that hospitals might reduce the number of elective surgeries that they do.”

The issue with Orange County’s hospitals isn’t beds or space but medical staff, Schultz said. “By slightly reducing elective surgeries, it would perhaps free up some staff to be used elsewhere in the hospital,” he said.

Most hospitals in Orange County are functionin­g close to standard capacity, Schultz said. “Some of them are starting to open up tents to help offload some of the burden on emergency department­s.”

As of Tuesday, 495 people with COVID-19 were hospitaliz­ed in Orange County, the highest number in nearly six months, as the winter surge was fading, and five times the number from a month ago, when 102 COVID-19 patients were in hospitals on July 10. Still, the recent number is far below the peak of the winter surge, when 2,259 people were hospitaliz­ed in Orange County’s hospitals.

The hospitals that are hardest hit by crowding tend to be near the county’s borders.

In general, the hospitals in southern Orange County can get crowded as there’s a relative scarcity of hospitals in that area, and hospitals near the county border in northern Orange County are sometimes crowded with patients coming in from L.A. County.

About 90% of COVID-19 patients in Orange County’s hospitals are not vaccinated, Supervisor Katrina

Foley said. In July, all children hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 in Orange County were not vaccinated, Chinsio-Kwong said.

There were 27 children hospitaliz­ed in July at Children’s Hospital of Orange County who had COVID-19, Dr. Matthew Zahn, medical director of the county’s Communicab­le Disease Control Division, said Monday.

The best way to protect children under 12, who are too young to be immunized, is to get everyone in the family vaccinated as soon as possible, Chinsio-Kwong said. And for children returning to school, she said, they will be required to wear a mask in indoor settings.

“Everybody needs to universall­y mask indoors” at schools, she said.

Foley this week also expressed concern over a recent diagnosis of COVID-19 psychosis in an Orange County teenager who had been diagnosed with multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome in children, as reported earlier this week by KCBS-TV.

A report published in the journal JAMA Neurology earlier this year said that in a study of 1,695 patients age 21 or younger who were hospitaliz­ed for MIS-C, 365 had neurologic­al problems. Of them, 43 developed lifethreat­ening disorders, and 11 died.

The syndrome is a rare condition associated with COVID-19 that can develop in children and cause different parts of the body to become inflamed, such as the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes or gastrointe­stinal organs, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

With COVID-19-induced psychosis, the child behaves unusually, Chinsio-Kwong said. “They may see things, hear things, just act very different,” she said, likely related to an inflammati­on of the brain. “They may be saying awkward things; they don’t know who they are; they don’t know who you are.

“It can be actually very scary for parents,” ChinsioKwo­ng said, and requires immediate, specialize­d health treatment.

Although MIS-C is rare, the fact that 22% of young people who did get MIS-C had neurologic­al problems in this study was concerning, Chinsio-Kwong said.

The child could have lasting health problems, she said. The study, however, did point out that neurologic­al problems in hospitaliz­ed children and adolescent­s were mostly transient.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? VANESSA HARPER of Behavioral Health Services and Dr. Brian Boyd enter an exam room at Providence St. Joseph in Orange.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times VANESSA HARPER of Behavioral Health Services and Dr. Brian Boyd enter an exam room at Providence St. Joseph in Orange.
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 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? DR. BRIAN BOYD dons an isolation gown in the emergency department at Providence St. Joseph.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times DR. BRIAN BOYD dons an isolation gown in the emergency department at Providence St. Joseph.

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