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California records highest coronavirus death total in a day as fatalities pass 8,000

California records highest coronavirus death total in a day
as fatalities pass 8,000 1

California recorded the most coronavirus-related deaths in a single day amid a spike in infections that has pushed the state’s cumulative case count to the highest in the nation.

Wednesday’s 157 fatalities — the state’s highest one-day toll yet, according to The Times’ coronavirus tracker — pushed California’s fatalities above 8,000.

The sobering death toll continues what’s been an unprecedented week in California in terms of the COVID-19 outbreak.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday afternoon that 12,807 new coronavirus infections had been reported statewide in the past 24 hours, a record high.

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More than 421,000 COVID-19 cases have been reported statewide over the course of the pandemic. That means roughly 1 in every 94 Californians has had a confirmed infection at some point.

Statewide, 7,170 confirmed COVID-19 patients were hospitalized as of Tuesday — also a new high and an increase of 18% from two weeks ago — with 2,058 people in intensive care, according to the state Department of Public Health.

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“It’s just another reminder … of the magnitude of impact that this virus continues to have,” Newsom said during a briefing Wednesday.

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Los Angeles County continues to bear the brunt of the statewide surge — with more than 165,000 total cases and 4,200 deaths confirmed as of Thursday morning.

So severe is the outbreak that health officials said COVID-19 is on track to be the second-leading cause of death in the county.

From January to June, COVID-19 killed roughly 3,400 people, according to the county Department of Public Health. Over the same period last year, only coronary heart disease was attributed as the cause of more deaths, with nearly 5,800.

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During the first six months of this year, COVID-19 also killed more than twice as many people in L.A. County as pneumonia and influenza did during the last flu season — which ran from October to May, health officials said.

“One of the reasons that we’re working so hard to flatten the curve and slow the spread of COVID-19 is to limit the strain on our healthcare system so that, when flu season arrives in a few short months, we’ll be able to contain and slow the spread of COVID-19 while we know that our hospitals will also need to care for people with influenza,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday.

Throughout the pandemic, officials have preached the importance of flattening the curve — holding the rate of new infections in check — so that the healthcare system isn’t overwhelmed.

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However, experts say hospitalization and death totals reflect exposure to the virus that occurred weeks ago, so it takes time to see how behavioral changes are affecting transmission, and whether measures implemented to stem the spread of the disease are working.

“I think we started to exit shelter-in-place sometime around Memorial Day both emotionally and physically. And we are paying the price for that,” said Nicholas Jewell, a biostatistics authority at UC Berkeley. “It’s like we should be tiptoeing out on the ice. What we did, instead, was all run out on the ice, some not too cautiously. And a lot of people fell through the ice.”

California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said it could take three to five weeks to see the full impact of measures the state has taken recently — including issuing a universal face mask order on June 18 and renewing restrictions on numerous activities and businesses last week.

However, there are some potential promising signs. L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti said Wednesday that the virus case positivity rate had declined slightly for the first time in several weeks — from a seven-day average of 13.6% last week to 10%.

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Though the COVID-19 threat level remains at orange, or high risk, Garcetti said, the city is “not moving to red and we are not closing any additional businesses or activities.”

“Between the closures two weeks ago and the renewed vigilance that I am certainly feeling across the city, we’ll know in the next week or so — together, guided by our county health department, by the data — where we are and where we’re moving,” he said.

Times staff writers Alejandra Reyes-Velarde and James Rainey contributed to this report.

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