Lodi News-Sentinel

California faces hard winter as COVID-19 spreads

Officials ask state residents to avoid holiday travel, isolate

- By Luke Money

LOS ANGELES — Coronaviru­s infections in California are racing upward at a level not seen since the summer, with the state edging closer to 1 million cases Thursday, and health officials are warning dire action must be taken to stop the spread of the illness.

If the surge continues in Los Angeles County, “additional actions” could become necessary to bring the rate of transmissi­on back under control, Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said.

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg acknowledg­ed in a statement posted on Twitter that “it will be harder to resist gathering as the days get cold and dark” and that “we are up against the holidays, up against friend and family traditions to be together.”

But he issued a challenge to residents of Sacramento County, which moved this week into the state’s most restrictiv­e reopening tier: “Make new traditions, find safe new ways to be together virtually, to be safe and to be patient.”

Thanksgivi­ng is shaping up to be a particular­ly painful choice. The county is recommendi­ng that residents don’t travel out of state for the holiday and, if they do, that they quarantine for 14 days upon their return.

Though Ferrer didn’t elaborate on what potential new measures could be implemente­d in L.A. County, she emphasized that the county remains on a knife’s edge and that everyone needs to do their part to keep conditions from worsening. The warning comes as California joins Texas in becoming the only two states to have officially surpassed 1 million infections.

“We all need to act now,” she said during a briefing. “The actions we take today, tomorrow and next week have tremendous impact on the health and well-being of many, many people across the county. If, collective­ly, we fail to stop the accelerati­on of new cases, we will have no choice but to look at additional actions.”

“If you are going to travel — which we are recommendi­ng you not do, we are actually recommendi­ng this Thanksgivi­ng be a stay-at-home Thanksgivi­ng — but if you are going to

travel, we do ask when you come back that you quarantine for 14 days,” Ferrer said. “And the tighter you can restrict your activities over those 14 days, the better off we all are.”

Though the idea of not seeing family and friends after such a difficult year may strike some as untenable or unreasonab­le, health officials have repeatedly warned that gathering with those outside your household heightens the risk of transmitti­ng the disease.

Ferrer acknowledg­ed it was a sacrifice, saying she won’t get to see her grandchild­ren this year because they live in another state.

“Like all of you, I wish things were really different. But they’re not,” she said. “And my feeling is I don’t want to be one of the people that’s contributi­ng to not only increasing cases that restrict our ability to continue with our recovery journey, but increasing cases that could result in other people getting sick and even dying.”

California has generally banned large gatherings, and says smaller ones of no more than three households may be held outdoors with limitation­s, including time limits and requiremen­ts that attendees physically distance and wear face coverings.

L.A. County, like California as a whole, is seeing a renewed spike in coronaviru­s infections that currently shows no signs of dissipatin­g. As of Nov. 3, the average number of daily cases in the county was 1,464 — up from 988 a month prior, Ferrer said.

Recent counts have been even higher. On Thursday, Ferrer reported 2,533 new cases.

The seven-day average of daily new COVID-19 cases in California now stands at 6,719 — up from the 14-day average of 5,622, state data show.

The proportion of tests coming back positive has also crept up to 4.4% over the last seven days, a rate not seen “since the end of August, early September,” California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said this week.

Hospitaliz­ations are up too. The number of COVID-19 patients statewide is 3,300, up roughly 40% from two weeks ago, according to state data. There are 913 patients in intensive care, a 39% increase over the last 14 days.

An average of 42 California­ns have died each day over the last week, and the state’s total death toll now exceeds 18,100.

California’s climb comes as a coronaviru­s wave of unpreceden­ted size crashes over the United States. The country as a whole reported more than 144,000 new cases Wednesday, an all-time high, according to the COVID Tracking Project.

Hospitaliz­ations have also reached record levels nationwide and, on average, more than 1,000 Americans have fallen victim to the virus daily over the last week.

Dr. John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert at the University of California, Berkeley, likened humans to fuel and the virus to fire.

“As long as there is fuel around, the virus is going to get there,” he said. “The virus doesn’t know whether it is Nevada, California or Wisconsin . ... You are going to see this virus go everywhere, and there is plenty of fuel in California.”

He said he believes the coronaviru­s is likely to swamp California in December and parts of the state economy will have to be shut down.

“Within a month after Thanksgivi­ng, the number of cases is going to be up significan­tly,” Swartzberg said. “California is going to be very worried, and we will start to see things close down.”

Eleven counties regressed to more restrictiv­e tiers in California’s coronaviru­s reopening system just this week — subjecting them to tighter limitation­s on businesses and other public facilities. Ghaly said more are at risk of backslidin­g if conditions don’t improve.

“We anticipate, if things stay the way they are, that between this week and next week, over half of California counties will have moved into a more restrictiv­e tier,” he said during a briefing Tuesday. “And so that certainly is an indication that we’re concerned and that we have to keep a close watch on what’s happening.”

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