Los Angeles Times

State’s COVID deaths surpass 100,000

‘Having so many people die weighs heavily on all of us,’ health director says.

- BY LUKE MONEY

It was three years ago this month that California documented its first known victim of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, the pandemic’s toll has breached a once-unthinkabl­e level, with more than 100,000 deaths reported statewide, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Unlike the first known victim — whose tragic brush with the coronaviru­s was recounted in detail during the pandemic’s early days — we may never know the identity of the individual who represents the latest grim milestone in an era marked with them.

“The heartache of having so many people die weighs heavily on all of us here at public health,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said. “I think it weighs equally heavily on everybody who lives in our county, in our state and our country and the world. Nobody, I think, anticipate­d this toll. None of us wanted this to lead to so many people losing their lives, and it creates great sadness. It’s hard for our community to recover.”

Even in a time of plentiful vaccines and therapeuti­cs, when COVID-19 has been pushed to the back of many a mind, California is still tallying more than 20 deaths every day, on average.

And as the state enters what officials characteri­ze as a new phase of the pandemic, the virus’ cumulative devastatio­n remains hard to comprehend while its day-to-day effects are, for many, increasing­ly easy to ignore.

“Some people say it’s nothing, ‘Why are you bothering us with this pandemic? We should be back to normal now,’ ” Dr. Sylvie Briand, director of epidemic and pandemic prevention

and preparedne­ss at the World Health Organizati­on, said at a recent webinar. “And others say it’s catastroph­ic: ‘My neighbor died yesterday. And last month it was my great-uncle who died.’

“Who is right?” she said. “Both perspectiv­es are understand­able because the risk of getting sick, the risk of having severe disease, is variable.”

California, the nation’s most populous state, has reported more COVID-19 deaths than any other state. Texas, Florida, New York and Pennsylvan­ia are the next closest, according to data compiled by The Times.

For perspectiv­e, California’s cumulative death toll is roughly equivalent to the population of cities such as Hesperia in San Bernardino County or Vista in San Diego County.

“This milestone is a tragic reminder of the very real toll the pandemic has taken on California­ns,” the state Department of Public Health wrote in a statement to The Times. “Our focus remains on the steps we can continue taking to limit further loss of life due to COVID-19.”

L.A. County, the nation’s most populous county, has reported more than 35,000 COVID-19 deaths.

“Just the magnitude of that is unimaginab­le, except for the people who have to live with it,” Ferrer said. “And for them, we continue to keep you in our prayers and our thoughts.”

Despite the massive tally, the Golden State has the 11th-lowest death rate among states when accounting for population, 255.3 per 100,000 residents, according to data compiled by The Times.

By comparison, 10 states — Arizona, Oklahoma, Mississipp­i, Tennessee, West Virginia, Arkansas, New Mexico, Alabama, Michigan and Florida — have cumulative death rates of at least 416 per 100,000 residents.

For many now, life in California goes on much as it did before the pandemic. Businesses are open, concerts and sporting events are packed, and masks are increasing­ly a relic of the past.

“With this last surge this past winter, the numbers were much, much lower than in prior surges as far as hospitaliz­ations, ICU and deaths,” said California state epidemiolo­gist Dr. Erica Pan.

Still, the virus has already killed more than 2,200 California­ns this year, with an average of 22 deaths per day tallied over the latest reporting period, state data show.

And even during this winter, easily the mildest of the pandemic era, the peak per capita death rate for COVID-19 has been “still much, much higher than a serious flu season,” Pan said during an online forum last week.

The virus’ potency has been lessened through widespread immunity, either from vaccines, prior infection or a combinatio­n of the two.

The availabili­ty of therapeuti­cs and wellknown health measures to tamp down transmissi­on — including regular hand washing, testing and, in certain situations, masking — also have played a role in curbing COVID-19, officials and experts say.

“COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and death rates have dramatical­ly slowed over the last 12 months because of California­ns’ diligence in getting vaccinated and the sacrifices of all California­ns to follow prevention and treatment guidance and tools,” the state public health department said. “Overall, through the state’s collective efforts, California has one of the nation’s lowest COVID-19 death rates compared to other states of comparable population sizes.”

But the danger is not the same for everyone. According to health officials, older adults, people with chronic health conditions and those who are unvaccinat­ed are among the individual­s who remain at increased risk for severe COVID-19 illness and death.

In December, unvaccinat­ed California­ns were 2.4 times more likely to contract COVID-19 than those who had received at least their primary vaccine series, state health data show. Unvaccinat­ed residents were also 2.6 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed and three times more likely to die from the disease.

“We know from our informatio­n, from the data we’ve been collecting, who’s at higher risk,” Ferrer said. “Our job is to make sure that, collective­ly, we recognize that there are some people that have much higher risk and we do our very best together to try to enhance their protection.”

‘This milestone is a tragic reminder of the very real toll the pandemic has taken on California­ns.’

— state Department

of Public Health

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? A CHAPLAIN PRAYS with a patient at a hospital in Mission Hills in 2021. Even in a time of plentiful vaccines and therapeuti­cs, California is still tallying more than 20 COVID-19 deaths every day, on average.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times A CHAPLAIN PRAYS with a patient at a hospital in Mission Hills in 2021. Even in a time of plentiful vaccines and therapeuti­cs, California is still tallying more than 20 COVID-19 deaths every day, on average.

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