The Ukiah Daily Journal

State death toll exceeds 30,000

- By Evan Webeck

As California collected its latest grim milestone Monday in its battle with COVID-19, hospitals in the Bay Area inched closer to entering surge capacity for the first time of the pandemic.

With 482 fatalities reported across the state Monday, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on, the cumulative death toll from the coronaviru­s in California crossed 30,000, with an average of approximat­ely 491 per day over the past week — the state’s deadliest seven days since the onset of the pandemic with more than twice as many fatalities as two weeks ago.

More than 2.7 million California­ns have contracted the virus, after another 54,302 tested positive on Monday. At about 42,000

cases per day over the past week, California is averaging approximat­ely 10% more infections than it was two weeks ago but still fewer than in the week prior to Christmas.

Fewer California­ns are coming in to hospitals with severe cases of COVID-19, but the situation in many intensive care units remains at its most dire of the pandemic. The active count of COVIDposit­ive patients grew by 21 on Sunday to a total of 21,668 currently hospitaliz­ed, including 4,868 in ICUS, both at or near record- highs. However, hospitaliz­ations have increased by about 10% in the past two weeks, well below the 45% growth rate in the previous twoweek period.

“T hat ’ s among the smallest increases over a two-week period in some time,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said on Monday, providing “just a little bit of optimism,” but he stipulated that “we’re not overly enthusiast­ic about it” because this plateau may be a brief one, with the possibilit­y of new hospitaliz­ations from the holidays still weeks away.

In the Bay Area, just 0.7% of staffed and licensed intensive-care beds were still available Monday under the state’s calculatio­n, the closest the region has come to operating in what Newsom has called “surge capacity,” meaning new patients may still be admitted to ICUS but the quality of care may diminish. In the hardest-hit regions of the state, Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley, hospitals have been operating beyond 100% of normal capacity for more than three weeks.

Within the region, however, capacity ranges from almost none in Santa Clara County to nearly a full third of intensivec­are beds in San Francisco and Alameda County. Two non-surge ICU beds were open in all of Santa Clara County on Sunday, according to the county, but accounting for staffed surge beds increases capacity to 7%.

In Napa and Santa Cruz counties, capacity had reached 0%; and San Mateo and Contra Costa each reported about 10% capacity.

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