The Mercury News

Post-holiday surge strikes California

Some good news: Officials encouraged by fewer cases than feared

- By Nico Savidge, John Woolfolk and Julia Prodis Sulek Staff writers

“We are incurring a debt of deferred medical care. We will be paying off this debt for months and years to come, because these people are going to get sicker, and their needs are not going to go away.”

— Dr. Ahmad Kamal, Santa Clara County’s COVID-19 director of health care preparedne­ss

A post-holiday coronaviru­s surge is taking shape across California almost two weeks into the new year, public health officials said Tuesday.

But the number of new ca ses following gatherings at Christmas and New Year’s so far does not appear to be nearly as large as the one after Thanksgivi­ng that swamped hospitals and led to new shelter-in-place orders.

Even if it’s less severe than feared, the increase is adding to the overwhelmi­ng strain on hospital systems, and there is no sign that COVID-19’s death toll is slowing down: As patients who fell ill weeks earlier succumb to the disease, California continues to endure the deadliest stretch of the pandemic to date, losing almost 500 people to the virus each day on average over the past week.

On Monday, the state shot past 30,000 deaths from the pandemic, which Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly called “an important and sad milestone.”

A nd in Sa nt a C la ra County, three hospitals have reported that they are at capacity in their morgues, officials said, and four others are near capacity. The county has provided three refrigerat­ed trailers for additional morgue capacity.

Still, state and local health officials struck a cautiously optimistic tone Tuesday that California may be blunting the alarming rise of new cases it saw through December.

It typically takes a couple of weeks for people who have been infected with the coronaviru­s to develop symptoms bad enough to land them in a hospital — meaning now is around the time state officials were bracing to see new cases from the holidays start to fill emergency rooms and intensive care units. Instead, Ghaly described a slowing demand for COVID-19 treatment at hospitals across the

state. After seeing about 3,500 new hospital admissions for COVID-19 each day last week, that figure has dropped to 2,500 this week.

“These are encouragin­g early signs,” Ghaly said, though he added that it remains far too early to “declare victory” in minimizing a holiday surge, since more people could fall ill through the middle of this month.

Late Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations have stabilized sufficient­ly in the Sacramento region to allow it

to become the first in the state to exit the shutdown order imposed last month as virus cases exploded. The move means restaurant­s may again serve diners outdoors, hair salons and other businesses can reopen, and retail stores can serve more customers.

California is reporting 42,000 new coronaviru­s cases on average each day over the past week, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on.

That’s higher than the roughly 36,000 per day it was averaging in early January, but lower than its the post-Thanksgivi­ng peak of more than 45,000 daily cases. Total hospitaliz­ations have similarly plateaued at around 22,000.

In Santa Clara County, where rapidly filling hospitals have prepared plans to enter crisis care scenarios, Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody said Tuesday that the number of new cases, which rose dramatical­ly through December, “is now starting to level off.”

The problem, Cody said, is that “it’s leveling off at a very, very high level.” The case rate in Santa Clara County is now five times higher than at any previous point in the pandemic, and its hospital capacity is lowest among Bay Area counties.

“Our hospitals are together really performing something of a high-wire act,” Cody said.

At Regional Medical Center

in East San Jose, one of the hardest hit by coronaviru­s cases in the Bay Area, the ICU is “full, full, full, over the top,” spokeswoma­n Sarah Sherwood said Tuesday.

Although the total number of COVID-19 patients in the hospital overall has dropped 20% since late December, the number being treated in the ICU has increased. All 37 ICU beds are full, 28 of them with COVID-19 patients.

“We’ve had to create more ICU rooms,” Sherwood said, which has meant treating spillover ICU patients in special sealed rooms in the emergency department.

Dr. Ahmad Kamal, Santa Clara County’s COVID-19 director of health care preparedne­ss, said that COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations “has squeezed out” other patients whose needs are less critical.

“We are incurring a debt of deferred medical care,” Kamal said. “We will be paying off this debt for months and years to come, because these people are going to get sicker, and their needs are not going to go away.”

“It is a very dangerous place to be,” Kamal continued, “and it is a place we need to get out of as soon as we can.”

Cody said she did not expect to see the number of fatalities in the county fall anytime soon, since they tend to lag hospitaliz­ations.

“This does not suggest deaths are falling off,” Cody said. “I think we will continue to see deaths increase.”

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