Los Angeles Times

70,000 have been killed by pandemic

State’s COVID toll is equivalent to erasing a midsize city. Daily deaths remain high.

- By Luke Money and Rong-Gong Lin II

COVID-19 has now killed 70,000 California­ns, illustrati­ng the pandemic’s stilldeadl­y consequenc­es even as its latest wave recedes.

While that overall death toll is the highest in the nation, other large states have seen cumulative death rates over the course of the pandemic that far surpass California’s.

The Golden State’s cumulative pandemic fatality rate — 178.5 deaths for every 100,000 residents — is the 35th highest. By comparison, rates are 284.4 in New York, 278.2 in Florida, 240.5 in Texas and 235 in Pennsylvan­ia, according to data compiled by The Times.

Nonetheles­s, the scale of California’s loss is staggering — equivalent to emptying an entire midsize city such as Palo Alto, San Clemente, Camarillo or Lynwood.

“It’s heartbreak­ing to know that we still have so many premature and largely preventabl­e deaths each week as a result of COVID,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said during a recent briefing.

Since June 20, the start of summer, the coronaviru­s has killed roughly 7,000 California­ns. As of Thursday, the overall death toll in the state is 70,010.

Though the statewide numbers of new infections and COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations have been steadily falling for weeks, the daily death counts have remained high.

Over the last week in California, an average of 97 people have died from the disease every day, Times data show. That’s down about 9% from two weeks ago, even though the number of new cases being reported day over day has tumbled by nearly 30% during that same time frame.

The statewide average is similar to the daily number of COVID-19 deaths following last year’s summer surge — long before vaccines were widely available, but during a time when officials shut down or severely limited business operations and restricted access to other public spaces in hopes of curbing the spread.

The nation is also confrontin­g a strain of the coronaviru­s — the Delta variant — that is far more contagious than any that circulated last year.

Although California has the benefit of plentiful vaccines, inoculatio­n rates are still lower than what’s necessary to achieve herd immunity, a high enough threshold to interrupt widespread transmissi­on of the virus.

“More deaths and COVID transmissi­on could have been prevented if we’d been just a little bit more cautious. Until we get more of our younger folks vaccinated, we really need to take precaution — even if our case rates are low,” said Dr. Regina Chinsio-Kwong, an Orange County deputy health officer.

As the number of infections drop, the number of deaths will eventually fall.

During the height of the Delta wave, California was reporting almost 15,000 new coronaviru­s cases per day.

Most recently, that average has fallen to just about 5,200.

Hospitaliz­ations too have plummeted. On Sunday, the daily number of coronaviru­s-positive patients receiving that level of care statewide dipped below 4,000 for the first time since late July.

But while the current trend lines are promising, officials are quick to stress that progress isn’t inevitable. Last year demonstrat­ed how rapidly early fall optimism can give way to wintertime devastatio­n.

Similar hopes that the worst of the pandemic had passed also faded last spring as the Delta variant swept through the nation.

“We seem to have turned a corner in our fight against COVID. But we’ve turned corners before only to run into oncoming trains,” Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of UC San Francisco’s Department of Medicine, said at a recent campus forum. “Part of the challenge for us relates to the fact that Delta is far better at its job of infecting people than the original virus was. So our future will be determined in part by the answer to this question: Is Delta as bad as it gets?”

Another question, Wachter said, is whether rapid coronaviru­s testing will become ubiquitous and cheap — which will be essential to easily identify people who are infected and keep them from inadverten­tly spreading the virus to others.

The general consensus among officials and experts is that California is poised to weather the fall-and-winter holiday season far better this year because so many residents have been vaccinated against COVID-19.

So far, more than 67% of California­ns have gotten at least one dose and 61% are considered fully vaccinated, according to data compiled by The Times.

As California looks forward to Halloween and other fall holidays, health officials and experts are still voicing caution in efforts to protect children who are still too young to get vaccinated.

Activities such as trickor-treating or Halloween parties should be done outdoors and in small groups, as maskless indoor gatherings pose a higher risk of transmissi­on, officials say.

Experts are also hopeful that vaccinatio­ns for children ages 5 to 11 will become available sometime in November. But to protect children who haven’t been fully vaccinated by Thanksgivi­ng, officials are urging all family members and friends to get vaccinated.

“Reducing our vulnerabil­ity as a community relies on decreasing the numbers of people that are unvaccinat­ed,” Ferrer said. “The greatest increase in protection that we’re going to get is by making sure that everyone has their primary series of vaccines.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? MARINE ONE f lies over thousands of white f lags honoring COVID victims on Sept. 20 in Washington.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times MARINE ONE f lies over thousands of white f lags honoring COVID victims on Sept. 20 in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States