Daily Observer (Jamaica)

California’s COVID-19 death count tops 70,000

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SACRAMENTO, California (AP) — California’s coronaviru­s death toll reached another once-unfathomab­le milestone — 70,000 people — yesterday as the state emerges from the latest infection surge with the lowest rate of new cases among all states.

Last year at this time, cases in the state started ticking up and by January California was in the throes of the worst spike of the pandemic and was the nation’s epicentre for the virus. Daily deaths approached 700.

The latest surge started in summer and was driven by the Delta variant that primarily targeted the unvaccinat­ed. At its worst during this spike, California’s average daily death count was in the low 100s.

Data collected by Johns Hopkins University showed the state with 70,132 deaths by midday yesterday. It’s the most in the nation, surpassing Texas by about 3,000 and Florida by 13,000, although California’s per capita fatality rate of 177 per 100,000 people ranks in the bottom third for the US

“There’s very little if anything ever to compare that to,” Dr Mark Ghaly, California’s health secretary, said of the level of deaths.

“Take a moment of silence and reflection on what that’s meant for California­ns,” he said. “Families that have lost more than one family member, key breadwinne­rs, people who couldn’t protect themselves.”

The most populous state is in a much better situation as it enters the colder months this year. It has been a national leader in vaccinatio­ns while others who survived the virus acquired a natural immunity that also helps prevent severe illness and death.

Even if there is a new surge, “the level of life-altering behaviours may be different this time around than we saw last winter,” Ghaly told The Associated Press.

He does not expect California to lock down as it did last year with business closures, social distancing requiremen­ts and capacity restrictio­ns.

“That is not what we’re talking about,” he said. “I think vaccines, plus masks in certain (indoor) settings, is going to be a significan­t support of us getting through anything that COVID throws at us in the future.”

A year ago, “there were all these debates, should we have Halloween vs no Halloween,” said Dr Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease expert at the University of California, San Francisco. “I think this winter is going to be a lot better than last winter, especially in California.”

More than 70 per cent of California­ns are now fully vaccinated and another eight per cent partially so, she noted. That compares to about onethird who had antibodies against the coronaviru­s in February, before the roll-out of vaccines and as California was recovering from a surge that strained hospitals to the breaking point.

Marm Kilpatrick, an infectious disease expert at the University of California, Santa Cruz, projects that the current level of immunity is still too low to avert another surge, particular­ly because people are tired of safety precaution­s.

Still, “it will primarily be those people who have not been infected before and those who are not vaccinated that will suffer the highest consequenc­es,” Kilpatrick said.

California was the first to impose a state-wide stay-athome order, in March 2020, and that aggressive action by Governor Gavin Newsom was credited by many with sparing the state from the kind of surge that devastated New York City early in the pandemic.

But later Newsom faced criticism that he was too slow to remove restrictio­ns on businesses and activities. He ultimately faced a recall election last month and voters overwhelmi­ngly chose to keep him in office.

Even as cases fell, Newsom recently announced the nation’s first plan to require all eligible schoolchil­dren to be vaccinated. The state also requires masks in school.

But the state’s local government­s have been imposing and lifting requiremen­ts on their own, creating a confusing patchwork of regulation­s.

In Los Angeles County, a vaccine requiremen­t just took effect for customers at indoor bars, wineries and a small group of other businesses. But in the city of Los Angeles, a far more aggressive vaccine mandate that applies to virtually all indoor businesses is set to take effect next month. No counties around Los Angeles County have such mandates.

In Northern California, San Francisco and several nearby counties announced plans to begin easing masking requiremen­ts as conditions improve. On Friday, Newsom called that “an encouragin­g sign,” while also offering caution about moving too quickly.

“This time last year we were experienci­ng not dissimilar optimism, only to experience that winter surge,” he said.

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? In this Friday, July 31, 2020 file photo, Romelia Navarro, 64, weeps while hugging her husband, Antonio, in his final moments in a COVID-19 unit at St Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, California.
(Photo: AP) In this Friday, July 31, 2020 file photo, Romelia Navarro, 64, weeps while hugging her husband, Antonio, in his final moments in a COVID-19 unit at St Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, California.

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