Percentage Of Covid-19 Deaths In L.A. ICUs Has Doubled Since October; “Serious” Vaccine Supply Problem
New numbers from the Los Angeles Department of Health Services seem to confirm one of health experts’ worst fears. Officials have long warned about an exponentially-increased number of deaths should hospitals become overwhelmed by Covid-19 cases and patients can no longer receive the same high standard of care.
Estimates released Wednesday by L.A. Health Services showed that since Nov. 3, about 23% of people hospitalized due to COVID-19 have died — up from 12% in September and October. The average hospital stay for patients has increased to more than nine days, up from less than seven in October.
Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said the county’s seven-day average of daily deaths was 179 on Jan. 10, dropping to 174 on Jan. 12. But on Wednesday, she reported 262 deaths, pushing the death toll from throughout the pandemic to 14,384.
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Hospital ICU units have been flooded with virus patients for at least the last month. Last week, Health Services Director Dr. Christina Ghaly revealed that 75% of the patients in county critical care wards had Covid. And the capacity of those wards had been stretched to nearly double their usual limit. At some point, such stresses compromise care and lead to more deaths.
But while deaths persist, the county had begun to see a drop in daily numbers of new cases, along with dips in overall hospitalizations and the testing positivity rate. Ferrer reported 6,492 new cases on Wednesday, the lowest total in weeks, although she said the number may be low due to reporting lags and lack of testing availability over the holiday weekend.
Ferrer said the county was averaging more than 15,000 new daily cases on Jan. 8, with the average dropping to about 10,000 a week later.
The seven-day average rate of people testing positive for the virus was 14% as of Wednesday, down from more than 20% at the end of December. The number of people hospitalized averaged more than 8,000 on Jan. 5, dropping to 7,383 on Jan. 15. As of Wednesday, there were 7,263 people hospitalized in the county, according to state figures, including 1,692 in intensive care.
“While it’s too soon to tell if we’re actually seeing a significant decline in the surge…we are very hopeful that the actions taken by many are starting to work,” she said. “Unfortunately, even if cases are beginning to decline, these numbers are still really high and they’re doing to continue to drive overcrowding in hospitals and high numbers of deaths.
“The reality for us is that Covid-19 is still rampant at our workplaces, in our neighborhoods and really across every corner of this county,” she said.
Ferrer also stressed that while hospitalization numbers have dropped, they still remain dangerously high.
“So the end is not yet in sight,” she said. “With high numbers of daily cases, hundreds more people will require hospitalizations every week.”
A bigger worry may be virus variants that could again spike numbers across the board, even as the state makes headway. Chief among those are the new strains of the virus that have been discovered in the state recently.
Over the weekend, Los Angeles Public Health Department announced that the much-talked-about UK variant of Covid-19, known as B.1.1.7, had been identified in the region. B.1.1.7 is thought to be up to 50% more transmissible than the more widely-spread form of the virus. The number of LA residents infected with the UK variant was thought to still be small.
Then, on Monday, the California Department of Public Health revealed that another lesser-known strain had been circulating in the county as well.
Dubbed CAL.20C, the variant is thought to have arisen in the state in July, but only began spreading significantly in November.
According to the New York Times, CAL.20C was found in over half the California test samples genomically analyzed in mid-January. The number of those samples analyzed, it should be noted, is vastly smaller than the total number of daily Covid-19 tests in the state.
But Eric Vail, the director of molecular pathology at Cedars-Sinai, told the Times that CAL.20C may have played a part in the surge in cases that overwhelmed Southern California’s hospitals earlier this month. “I’m decently confident that this is a more infectious strain of the virus,” said Dr. Vail. Other experts were less sure.
The 6,492 new cases reported Wednesday increased the cumulative countywide total from throughout the pandemic to 1,038,092.
Ferrer continued to urge patience among people trying to make appointments for COVID-19 vaccines, acknowledging website issues that crashed the system for several hours Tuesday after the county announced that people aged 65 and over can be vaccinated.
The website — vaccinatelacounty.com — is running again, but due to limited vaccine supplies, available appointments are limited.
The county has also expanded the capacity of its call-in reservation system and urged residents to use the call system only if they are unable to make appointments through the website.
Appointments beyond this week remain murky, given dramatic shortages in the county’s supply of vaccine doses.
Ferrer said Wednesday the county now expects to receive about 143,900 more doses of the vaccines next week. However, since people need to receive two doses of the medication, spaced three to four weeks apart, the bulk of the vaccine coming next week will be used to administer second doses to people who have already received the first shot.
She estimated that only 37,900 of the doses coming next week will be available for people to receive their first dose.
Ferrer also said that, with seniors included, the number of county residents now authorized to receive the vaccine is 4 million. To date, she noted, L.A. has received 650,000 doses.
“This is what I mean by a serious supply problem,” said Ferrer. “We just are not receiving enough vaccine doses to move as quickly as we and you would like us to.”
She said that as of the end of last week, the county had received 685,000 doses, with 307,000 used so far for first doses and 87,000 for second doses. The county is still working to complete vaccinations of hundreds of thousands of health care workers with remaining doses, even as it expands access to people 65 and older.
Ferrer noted that about 30,000 doses of Moderna vaccine the county has received have been taken out of circulation on orders of the state, following allergic reactions suffered by a half-dozen people in San Diego. Ferrer said some doses from that same batch had already been administered in Los Angeles County, with no reports of any allergic reactions. But the remaining doses from the batch remain on hold until the state completes its investigation into the San Diego cases.
County Board of Supervisors Chair Hilda Solis signed an executive order this week opening the shots to older residents.
“We know COVID-19 has been particularly hard on those 65 and older,” Solis said Tuesday. “Just look at our numbers. Over 99,000 residents 65 and older have been infected with COVID-19; 30,000 of those residents 65 and older have been hospitalized because of COVID-19; and tragically, 9,802 residents in this age group have died from COVID-19. That’s out of 14,000 people that have died.
“This is about equity,” she said. “Older adults have been unfairly impacted by the virus. They’ve stayed home for months, isolated, which is as you know a problem in and of itself. But the COVID-19 vaccine is here. Hope is here.”
Solis admitted that “there isn’t enough vaccine for all those over 65,” but indicated she was hopeful the Biden Administration would make more doses available. “Let’s leave it at that,” she said.