San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

CALIFORNIA VIRUS CASES DOWN, BUT DEATHS RISING

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

As a hospice nurse, Antonio Espinoza worked to ease people’s passage into death. Just 36 years old, it seemed unlikely he soon would be on that journey.

But when the unpredicta­ble coronaviru­s hit Espinoza, he spiraled from fever to chills to labored breathing that sent him to a Southern California hospital, where he died Monday, a little more than a week after being admitted.

Espinoza is among the latest to succumb in what has become California’s deadliest surge. An average of 544 people died every day in the last week, and on Saturday the state reached the grim milestone of 40,000 deaths overall, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

In barely a year since the virus was first detected in the state, 1 in 1,000 California­ns have died from it.

Espinoza’s wife, Nancy, watched through a glass window in the hospital as her husband took his last breaths, then was allowed in the room to be with him. She’s now figuring out what to do next and how she’ll raise their 3-year-old son alone.

“I just had so much faith,” said Nancy Espinoza, who by cruel coincidenc­e lives in a city named Corona. “Never in my mind would it have crossed me that it would be this serious, even though we hear about it all the time.”

The victims of COVID-19 have been young and old, though mostly older. Some were fit and healthy, many more had a medley of underlying medical conditions.

California’s death toll has climbed rapidly since the worst surge of the pandemic started in mid-october. New cases and hospitaliz­ations surged to record highs but have declined rapidly in the last two weeks.

Deaths remain staggering­ly high, however, with more than 3,800 in the last week.

It took six months for California to record its first 10,000 deaths, then four months to double to 20,000. In just five more weeks the state reached 30,000. It then took only 20 days to get to 40,000.

Now only New York has more deaths — fatalities there have topped 43,000 — but at this pace California will eclipse that too.

In San Diego County, officials on Saturday reported 2,128 new cases, down from the more than 3,000 per day that were being reported just a few weeks ago; the county has so far tallied more than 236,700 cases. Officials also reported 32 more deaths, bringing the county’s total to 2,603.

Hospitaliz­ations continue to increase, though at a much slower pace than earlier in January. The county report Saturday showed 49 more people being hospitaliz­ed, bringing the total to 1,375 people hospitaliz­ed for the coronaviru­s, down from nearly 1,800 on Jan. 16.

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