Health & Fitness

Since Labor Day, The Coronavirus Is Spreading Faster In LA

LA is seeing an uptick in new cases as well as the COVID-19 virus transmission rate, and it's likely to delay reopenings in the county.

People gather on the beach along the Pacific Ocean on the first day of the Labor Day weekend amid a heat wave Sept. 5 in Santa Monica, Calif.
People gather on the beach along the Pacific Ocean on the first day of the Labor Day weekend amid a heat wave Sept. 5 in Santa Monica, Calif. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES, CA — Two weeks after the Labor Day weekend holiday, Los Angeles appears to be facing another uptick in the spread of the coronavirus.

For several days in a row, the county has seen an increase in daily new cases, and the virus transmission rate is inching up. Both are signs that holiday gatherings may have led to a backslide in the county's efforts to slow the outbreak.

The uptick was expected, given the surge following the Memorial Day and the Fourth of July holiday weekends. County officials hope a surge from Labor Day won't be as bad, though, because bars and restaurants remained closed to in-person dining and because of increased mask-wearing. Still, it will likely delay more-expansive business reopenings in Los Angeles County.

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Roughly six to seven months into the pandemic that has taken 6,425 lives in Los Angeles County, health officials are still trying to convince residents that COVID-19 is far deadlier than the flu.

County public health Director Barbara Ferrer on Wednesday issued another warning to people who persist in thinking the coronavirus does not pose a serious threat, saying the county has seen an 18 percent rise in overall deaths this year when compared with this stage of the past three years.

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"In other words, when we compare the first seven months of 2020 to the first seven months of the past three years, we've observed on average 18 percent more deaths than we expected, based on past trends," Ferrer said. "And we know that the excess deaths are not fully attributable to just people who died of COVID-19. But I do want to emphasize — especially for those who continue to believe that COVID-19 is no worse than a bad case of influenza — that this chart shows that, in fact, it's much worse.

"We've probably had 20 to 30 percent more deaths in May, June and July of 2020 than we saw in the prior three years for the same months," she said. "If you look at the entire L.A. County population, this has translated into thousands of deaths that would otherwise not have occurred."

Ferrer continued to paint a picture of L.A. County generally winning the fight to slow the spread of the virus, although she again said this is a "critical week" in determining if the county is experiencing a post-Labor Day surge in cases. Daily new case numbers in the county have been on a steady decline for at least six weeks. But at the end of last week — roughly two weeks after the Labor Day holiday — the county saw a series of increases, with new cases topping 1,000 on four consecutive days.

On Wednesday, Ferrer announced 1,265 new cases — although some of those positive tests could potentially have occurred over the past few days, when test results tend to lag from the weekend.

The county, however, also reported a disturbing increase in the local virus transmission rate — the average number of people a coronavirus patient infects with the illness. That number had been steadily declining, dropping below the critical threshold of 1.0; but on Wednesday, it rose to 1.02.

Health officials have said that keeping the transmission rate below 1 is critical to slowing the spread of the virus, so the county will keep a close watch on that number in the coming days to see if it continues inching upward.

Concerns about post-Labor Day case numbers also have the county reluctant to move ahead with any new business reopenings — most notably for nail salons, which were cleared by the state Tuesday to resume indoor operations. The county, however, is yet to authorize them to reopen locally, and county Supervisor Hilda Solis expressed hesitance to do so until more data is collected this week to determine case trends.

"We regularly speak with our public health director, whether its via email or phone conversations," she said. "We will be having our meeting this coming Tuesday, and we'll be able to discuss some of these items, and they're very, very — what could I say — concerning, because we know that we're waiting to see data coming back after the Labor Day weekend, so I am very, very cautious of that."

Ferrer confirmed Wednesday that the county currently meets the criteria to move up a tier in the state's four-tier roadmap for business reopenings, thanks to a current average testing-positivity rate of just 2.8 percent and a new daily case rate of seven per 100,000 residents.

But those statistics, which are used by the state to classify counties in the appropriate tier, are based on data collected the week of Sept. 6-12 — before the county saw the four-day spike in daily case numbers last week.

"So we're not sure that we'll have another week where our adjusted daily case rate is at or below seven new cases per 100,000 residents," she said. "But we are heartened that L.A. County has met the thresholds that allow us to see our progress and in the future move to tier two."

The county is in the most-restrictive, "purple" tier of the state's matrix. Moving up to tier two, or the "red" tier, would allow more businesses to reopen, including movie theaters, with capacity limits and other restrictions.

The 1,265 new cases announced Wednesday, along with 69 announced by Long Beach health officials and six more announced by Pasadena, lifted the countywide cumulative total since the start of the pandemic to 263,408.

Ferrer also announced 31 more coronavirus-related deaths, while Long Beach added two more, lifting the total to 6,425.

A total of 779 people were hospitalized due to the virus as of Wednesday — down sharply from the average of 2,200 patients that were reported back in July following the Fourth of July holiday.

City News Service and Patch Staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report.

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