San Diego Union-Tribune

STATE AGAIN FACING RISING ANXIETY ABOUT CORONAVIRU­S SPREAD

As summer nears, concern grows over strength of latest wave

- BY RONG-GONG LIN II

California is approachin­g another summer amid growing anxiety over COVID-19 as outbreaks increase and officials try to determine when this new wave will crest.

Although case rates are climbing, experts note they are doing so at a more modest pace than the first Omicron surge, which began spiking in December. California’s per capita COVID-19 hospitaliz­ation rate is also lower than some states on the East Coast.

But with Memorial Day, graduation­s, proms and other seasonal events on the horizon, officials are concerned about the upward trend worsening.

“We are seeing more activity, and so it is time to break out your mask and break out your tests and just be a bit more cautious than maybe you were a month ago,” said Dr. Sara Cody, public health director and health officer for Santa Clara County. “Even if you got Omicron during the Omicron surge, you can still get COVID again, unfortunat­ely.”

California is reporting about 8,000 daily coronaviru­s cases in the last week, up 18 percent over the previous week’s tally of 6,800 cases a day. The statewide test positivity rate has climbed to 4 percent; a week ago it was 3 percent.

Coronaviru­s-positive hospitaliz­ations also have started to tick upward, but the number of patients needing intensive care has remained relatively stable, hovering near record lows for the pandemic.

Health officials across the state widely agree that it’s prudent to take precaution­s when coronaviru­s transmissi­on is high — including wearing masks

in indoor public spaces, being up to date on vaccinatio­ns and boosters, and gathering outdoors when possible or increasing ventilatio­n when meeting indoors.

The San Francisco Bay Area has California’s highest coronaviru­s case rate — nearly double that of Southern California — and coronaviru­s levels in sewage for much of Silicon Valley have more than doubled over the last two weeks.

“They’ve been steadily climbing for about a month, and they’re above what we saw at the height of Delta,” last summer’s dominant variant, Cody said of viral levels in wastewater.

Coronaviru­s levels in wastewater also are increasing in Yolo County, home to UC Davis, said Dr. Alexander T. Yu, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious diseases expert with the California Department of Public Health who briefed the California Medical Associatio­n on Tuesday. The upward trend, which began in March and was most prominent in the Bay Area, is now increasing in most regions, Yu said.

A steady increase in the amount of virus detected in wastewater has been recorded in San Diego County as well.

The Bay Area now has a rate of 226 weekly coronaviru­s cases for every 100,000 residents, up 14 percent over the prior week. The state as a whole was reporting 144 cases a week for every 100,000 residents, and Southern California’s rate was 134. A rate of 100 or higher is considered a high rate of transmissi­on, the worst tier, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We are also seeing a pretty significan­t uptick in reports of outbreaks from schools, worksites and other congregate facilities,” Cody said. “Many of them are related to social gatherings.”

San Diego County, which now only publishes newcase totals on Mondays and Thursdays, is set to release new figures later today.

Health experts are also beginning to warn that Omicron survivors can get reinfected. Experts had initially thought that surviving the first Omicron variant, BA.1, likely provided protection against subvariant BA.2. But that may not be true for the latest ascendant Omicron subvariant, BA.2.12.1.

Cody urged people to take precaution­s. “When COVID (conditions) start getting wild, you have to add on other layers: You have to mask indoors, test when necessary, try to take things outside if you can,” she said.

Dr. Erica Pan, California’s state epidemiolo­gist, reiterated that Omicron can still be dangerous. While much has been said about Omicron being less likely to cause severe illness, its extraordin­arily contagious­ness means a lot more people can be simultaneo­usly infected, and more people died during the fall and winter Omicron surge than the earlier Delta wave.

The deaths of more than 14,100 California­ns from COVID-19 have been reported since Jan. 1, when Omicron was dominant, while the COVID-19 deaths of nearly 12,800 California­ns were reported in the last six months of 2021, around the time Delta was dominant, according to state data.

“As people talk about Omicron being milder ... the deaths overall in the peak were definitely higher during Omicron than during Delta, for example, with such a high volume of cases,” Pan said in a talk with the California Medical Associatio­n.

Two of three California­ns live in counties in which coronaviru­s transmissi­on is considered high, including San Diego, Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, as well as every coastal county north of Los Angeles, along with the entire San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento County.

But an analysis conducted by the state Department of Public Health of coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations on a per capita basis also shows that California is doing better than Northeast counterpar­ts like New York and Massachuse­tts.

“Thankfully, California has actually remained relatively low in comparison to the trends of these other states,” Pan said. “We’ve been watching this very, very closely, but it’s somewhat reassuring that our hospitaliz­ations have not increased at the same pace as some of the other states.”

While the East Coast has sometimes been a precursor of what will come in California, there have been times when COVID-19 trends in other states haven’t emerged here. For instance, in the spring of 2021, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC director, warned of a feeling of “impending doom” about the pandemic when case rates were rising; but those ended up being limited to parts of the Midwest, and the rest of the nation continued its recovery until the summer Delta surge hit.

Also of note, the Omicron subvariant­s BA.4 and BA.5, which have been blamed for a new surge in South Africa, have not gripped California in the same way.

“We have seen a handful of these in California as well and are monitoring it closely. But so far it has not taken off in the same way as it has in South Africa,” Pan said. South Africa might be harder hit by BA.4 and BA.5 because the country didn’t see as much of a BA.2-fueled surge, she said.

California has also benefited from the widespread availabili­ty of anti-COVID drugs. Newly infected people can get prescripti­ons from health providers and “test to treat” sites at select pharmacies.

“More and more, we have ample supply now of antivirals, so Paxlovid, we have plenty of supply, and then molnupirav­ir as well,” Pan said, referring to the two drugs that can be taken orally. “There is no shortage anymore.”

Oral anti-COVID medication­s must be taken within five days of the first COVID-19 symptoms. Of the two, Paxlovid is considered more effective.

 ?? KRISTIAN CARREON FOR THE U-T ?? With summer on the horizon, crowds will grow at popular destinatio­ns such as the boardwalk in Mission Beach.
KRISTIAN CARREON FOR THE U-T With summer on the horizon, crowds will grow at popular destinatio­ns such as the boardwalk in Mission Beach.

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