Los Angeles Times

COVID SURGES AMONG STATE’S SENIORS

Hospitaliz­ation rates for those 70 and older have surpassed the July Omicron peak.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II

There has been a troubling spike in coronaviru­s positive hospital admissions among seniors in California, rising to levels not seen since the summer Omicron surge.

Hospitaliz­ations have roughly tripled for California­ns of most age groups since the autumn low. But the jump in seniors in need of hospital care has been particular­ly dramatic.

Officials in Los Angeles County have said increases in hospitaliz­ations could lead to an indoor mask order, possibly in early January. Still, there is optimism that any winter surge will not be as bad as those of the last two years.

Rising hospitaliz­ation rates are a reason health officials are urging people, especially seniors, to get the updated COVID-19 booster shot and, if they test positive and are eligible, to access therapeuti­c drugs that probably will reduce the severity of any illness.

Only 35% of California’s vaccinated seniors age 65 and up have received the updated booster since it became available in September.

Among eligible 50- to 64year-olds, about 21% have received the updated booster. The rate is 12% for younger adults, 9% for adolescent­s and 8% for 5- to 11-year-olds. The updated booster rate for all vaccinated California­ns age 5 and up is 18%.

“We are doing a pathetic job of protecting seniors (and age 50+) from severe COVID in California,” tweeted Dr. Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute in La Jolla.

Immunity against COVID-19 weakens over time. The booster is especially important for older people, who are at higher risk for severe illness and death.

“The people who are dying today are principall­y people who are unvaccinat­ed or haven’t gotten an up-to-date vaccine,” Xavier Becerra, the U.S. Health and Human Services secretary, said Thursday in an online forum with the Public Policy Institute of California.

COVID-19 deaths in the state have remained stable at 100 to 200 a week. However, there is concern that increases in cases and hospitaliz­ations could lead to more fatalities.

Of all age groups, 70-plus is the only one that is seeing its hospitaliz­ation rate in California exceed that of the summer Omicron peak, according to the U.S. Centers

for Disease Control and Prevention.

New coronaviru­s-positive hospitaliz­ations have doubled in just 2½ weeks to 8.86 for every 100,000 California­ns age 70 and up. The summer peak, in July, was 8.36; the autumn low, just before Halloween, was 3.09.

During the seven days to Friday, 2,450 coronaviru­spositive California­ns age 70 and up were admitted to hospitals — 44% more than in the prior week.

Meanwhile, the hospitaliz­ation rate for 60- to 69year-olds has doubled since Nov. 11, from 1.28 to 2.59. The summer peak for that age group was 3.03.

Concerned about the rise in cases and hospitaliz­ations, state health officials issued an alert to remind doctors that there are plenty of drugs available for newly infected people.

“There is ample supply of COVID-19 therapeuti­c agents, but they have been underused — especially among population­s disproport­ionately impacted by COVID-19, including communitie­s of color, low-income communitie­s, and residents of long-term care facilities,” the California Department of Public Health said.

The drugs can reduce the risk of hospitaliz­ation and death by 88% among unvaccinat­ed people and by 45% among vaccinated or previously infected people, the

agency said.

The drugs “are free and widely available,” Orange County Health Officer Dr. Regina Chinsio-Kwong noted in a statement. “Medication­s such as the Paxlovid pill can stop the virus from multiplyin­g in your body, help you test negative sooner, and may lower the risk of developing long COVID symptoms. Additional­ly, you do not need to have insurance or U.S. citizenshi­p.”

Other therapies against COVID-19 are becoming effectivel­y useless.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion said it was no longer authorizin­g the monoclonal antibody bebtelovim­ab to treat the disease because it’s not expected to work against the Omicron subvariant­s

BQ.1 and BQ.1.1.

CDC data released Friday estimate that BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 account for 62.8% of coronaviru­s cases nationwide. The parent strain, BA.5, now accounts for just 13.8% of cases.

The coronaviru­s outlook has deteriorat­ed rather suddenly since Thanksgivi­ng around swaths of California.

The worsening rate “indicates a higher risk for more individual­s to catch COVID-19 this winter,” Chinsio-Kwong said. She urged people to mask up in indoor public settings.

On Nov. 17, all but one of California’s 58 counties — Imperial — was in the low COVID-19 community level as defined by the CDC, which measures case and hospitaliz­ation rates.

On Thanksgivi­ng, three more counties — Fresno, Madera and Del Norte — joined Imperial in the medium category.

On Thursday, 23 counties entered the medium level: Los Angeles, Orange, Santa Clara, Sacramento, Stanislaus, Sonoma, Monterey, Placer, Merced, Marin, Yolo, Butte, El Dorado, Kings, Nevada, Mendocino, Tehama, San Benito, Tuolumne, Siskiyou, Glenn, Mariposa and Sierra.

About 22 million people, 55% of California­ns, live in counties now at the medium level.

In Los Angeles County, coronaviru­s cases rose nearly 50% during the last week, from 2,049 to 3,053 a day. The county’s rate has been increasing since late October and is more than triple what it was in the autumn.

For the week that ended Friday, L.A. County was recording 212 cases for every 100,000 residents; a rate of 100 or more is considered high. The COVID-19 death rate in the county is stable at around 60 per week.

Besides COVID-19, L.A. County is contending with rising influenza cases and a high level of respirator­y syncytial virus, which is stressing children’s hospitals. The flu positivity rate in L.A. County is 25%, the highest for this time of year for at least six years.

For L.A. County to reinstate a mask mandate, two hospitaliz­ation thresholds must be met. One has already been reached.

There were 1,285 admissions of coronaviru­spositive patients to county hospitals for the week that ended Wednesday — more than triple the rate from the beginning of November. That’s 12.8 for every 100,000 residents, and a rate of 10 or greater is one of the thresholds for a mask mandate.

The other threshold is reached if the percentage of hospital beds used by coronaviru­s-positive patients is 10% or greater, an indication of strain on the hospital system. This level was reached during the 2020 and 2021 winter surges, the deadliest of the pandemic.

The current figure is 5.9%, up from around 2% at the start of November.

The earliest the level could hit 10% would be late December, Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer estimated last week.

If that happens, there would likely be a two-week countdown before a mask order would take effect — thus, early January at the soonest.

Elsewhere, Orange County’s coronaviru­spositive hospitaliz­ation rate has doubled since midNovembe­r to 432 per week, according to the CDC, or 13.6 for every 100,000 residents.

Orange County reports that 4.9% of hospital beds are being used by coronaviru­s-positive patients.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? A CHAPLAIN prays for a COVID-19 patient at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times A CHAPLAIN prays for a COVID-19 patient at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills.

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