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Southern California is a main driver of state’s record COVID-19 deaths, with no signs of a letup

A doctor cleans her gloved hands with hand sanitizer in a makeshift parking lot facility
Dr. Grace Neuman uses hand sanitizer in the parking garage of a Los Angeles health center prior to administering nasal swabs to test for the coronavirus.
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
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Deaths from COVID-19 in California have reached record levels this week, a grim sign of how even advances in medical care and a younger demographic of those infected are no match for the relentless spread of the coronavirus.

Southern California and the Central Valley are by far the state’s biggest contributors of total deaths in the last week. Of nearly 950 deaths reported in California in the last week, a Times analysis shows that more than 300 fatalities were reported in L.A. County, followed by nearly 80 in San Bernardino County, about 70 each in Riverside and San Diego counties and nearly 60 in Orange County.

Charts show California counties with the most COVID-19 deaths. The top 5 are in Southern California
COVID-19 deaths in Southern California in the last week are driving the state’s death toll.
(Los Angeles Times )
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Deaths were also rising in Northern California, although not at the numbers seen in the Southland.

California this week broke its single-day record for COVID-19 deaths — 219 on Tuesday. The state averaged 146 new deaths daily over the last week, a new all-time high, according to The Times’ analysis.

Health officials expect deaths to continue spiking in the coming weeks as it’s becoming clear many people got infected over the Thanksgiving holiday.

The coronavirus is now infecting mostly younger adults. But once the virus spreads to older people — those age 50 or higher — the likelihood of death is much higher.

California coronavirus cases and deaths by age group
(Los Angeles Times)

Just a few weeks ago, the chance of getting the coronavirus was relatively rare, like the chance of getting soaked while dining outside when there’s just a light sprinkle, said Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, medical epidemiologist and infectious diseases expert at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. Now, the virus is so widespread, the situation is more like a heavy storm.

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“If it’s a downpour — because the whole community has widespread transmission — if you’re going to be outside, you’re going to get wet. You could get the virus,” Kim-Farley said.

In California, there was some optimism earlier this fall that, even with another surge, deaths could remain under control because doctors had gotten better at treating COVID-19 patients and there had been less spread in institutions such as nursing homes. But starting in late October, the third surge of the pandemic began, accelerating into November and dashing hopes that the autumn would be relatively mild and California could continue its reopening.

“In all honesty, we never expected ... we would be in this situation at this time of the year,” L.A. County health officer Dr. Muntu Davis said in mid-November. “We were really hoping that we would be ... by this time of the year, in November, getting our schools back open.”

It is true that a patient entering a hospital now probably has a better chance of survival than earlier in the pandemic. Doctors have learned to avoid, when possible, placing patients on mechanical ventilators and to use alternative ways to get more oxygen into the bloodstream; to place people on their bellies to make it easier for them to breathe; and to give patients steroid treatments.

But COVID-19 is now so widespread that the overall chance of getting infected, and therefore being one of the 12% who need hospitalization, is now much greater than ever.

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“The more transmission you have, the more people are ending up in the hospital, and ... the more deaths we’re going to witness,” said L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

It’s now clear that some Californians are weary of wearing masks and staying physically distant, setting the stage for the autumn surge of the disease.

“This is the surge that we all expected when we first got wind of this thing in the spring,” said Dr. Shruti Gohil, associate medical director of epidemiology and infection prevention at UC Irvine.

There are now about 25,000 Californians testing positive for the virus daily, more than double the peak of the last surge, in the summer, when fewer than 10,000 a day were testing positive for the virus each day.

More Californians died of COVID-19 on Tuesday than any other day on record, the latest milestone reached amid an accelerating pandemic.

Dec. 9, 2020

As a result, activities that were relatively less risky just a few weeks ago are now more dangerous.

L.A. County officials estimate that about 1 in 140 L.A. County residents are contagious with the virus — far more than in late September, when just 1 in 880 were contagious.

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Daily deaths are expected to continue climbing for weeks to come. Every infected person in L.A. County is infecting, on average, 1.14 other people, among the highest transmission rates since the first weeks of the pandemic.

Every L.A. County resident infected with the coronavirus transmits it to 1.14 other people on average.
Every L.A. County resident infected with the coronavirus on average transmits it to 1.14 other people, according to data released Wednesday, meaning the virus is still spreading.
(L.A. County Department of Health Services
)

The boom in daily deaths that resulted from virus transmission over Thanksgiving won’t become apparent until January, a projection based on how past waves have behaved.

A jump in coronavirus transmission around Thanksgiving is expected to manifest itself in increased deaths in January.
A jump in coronavirus transmission around Thanksgiving is expected to manifest itself in increased deaths in January, because it takes weeks for the virus to multiply in the body and then cause disease severe enough to send people to the hospital and, eventually, for some people to die.
(Los Angeles County Department of Public Health)

“I do anticipate that the deaths will continue to increase in the weeks to come,” said Dr. Christina Ghaly, the L.A. County director of health services. “Sadly, patients often have very long hospital [stays], and are just not able to recover.”

Compared to a month ago, L.A. County now has four times the number of hospitalizations and four times the number of daily deaths. There are now 43 L.A. County residents dying from COVID-19 daily; it’s plausible that the number could double by Christmas, according to calculations by Ghaly’s agency.

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Forecast of daily mortality in L.A. County
Forecast of daily mortality in L.A. County
(Los Angeles County Department of Health Services)

The virus can cause a host of serious complications, hijacking other cells and, with pneumonia, causing inflammation and destruction of the lungs, drowning the organs in fluid. The virus can cause shortness of breath and low levels of oxygen in the blood, and result in an inability to breathe and the failure of multiple organs.

More than 8,000 L.A. County residents have died of COVID-19 — a fact that nearly brought Ferrer to tears during a briefing Wednesday.

“Over 8,000 people who were beloved members of their families are not coming back,” she said, her voice choking. “And their deaths are an incalculable loss to their friends and their family, as well as our community.”

The biggest concern now among health officials is the crowded state of hospital intensive care units.

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Some ICUs across the state, from Silicon Valley to the Central Valley, are already reporting 0% available capacity. Across L.A. County, available ICU capacity was at 11.8%.

“Let me be clear: 11.8% ICU capacity is dangerously low,” said L.A. County Supervisor Hilda Solis. “Already we have seen some of our hospitals have to divert ambulances overnight to other hospitals.”

Certain regions were harder hit than others, including the heavily Latino regions of the San Gabriel Valley and southeast L.A. County. On Tuesday, there were zero staffed, licensed and available ICU beds in the San Gabriel Valley, and only five on the Westside and six in southeast L.A. County.

The rate of new COVID-19 hospitalizations is higher than ever in L.A. County. In the first surge, the rate never topped more than about 300 new COVID-19 hospitalizations a day. But last week, officials reported 350 new hospitalizations a day and, this week, nearly 500 new hospitalizations a day.

“Given that we’re just now seeing the hospitalizations that resulted from the recent Thanksgiving holiday,” Ghaly said, “we anticipate that the number will continue to grow over the next few weeks, with potentially up to 700 new daily COVID hospitalizations in just one week from now.”

In L.A. County, hospitals have been addressing the increased demand for staffed hospital beds by calling in help from other areas of the hospital system, which is forcing cancellations of scheduled surgeries and outpatient visits; discharging patients as quickly as possible; and temporarily diverting ambulances with certain types of patients to other hospitals, which can only be done in two-hour time periods. Patients suffering trauma, heart attacks and strokes cannot be diverted elsewhere.

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On Tuesday, 77% of hospitals in L.A. County were diverting patients at some point during the day; normally at this time of year, 10% to 15% of hospitals would be on such a diversion.

Other measures hospitals can take include discharging COVID-19 patients and setting them up with oxygen treatments at home, followed up daily visits from trained staff.

Health officials are hopeful that the regional stay-at-home order that went into effect Sunday night will help to tamp down on the rise in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations. The order reduces capacity at retail stores; closes businesses including hair salons, nail salons, card rooms, museums, zoos, aquariums; and closes outdoor restaurant dining. On Wednesday, a new region — Greater Sacramento — saw its ICU capacity fall below 15%, and will see a stay-at-home order imposed beginning Thursday night.

By that point, there will be 36 million Californians subject to the regional stay-at-home order, covering 92% of California’s population and 41 of the state’s 58 counties.

San Francisco officials said they would run out of intensive care beds in 17 days if the current rate of infection remained stable.

San Francisco health officials urge residents to stay home, calling it “probably the most important message” since the pandemic began.

Dec. 9, 2020

San Francisco health director Dr. Grant Colfax urged residents to stay home, saying that avoiding contact with others now was “probably the most important message” he has tried to impart since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

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“To be blunt, we have one chance to turn this serious surge around, and that chance is right now,” he said. “But our window is narrowing and closing fast.”

Lin and Dolan reported from San Francisco, Money from Long Beach. Times staff writer Sean Greene contributed to this report.

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