Health & Fitness

SC Co. Residents Issued Urgent Christmas Warning: Stay Home

Public urged to to stay home Christmas Day amid COVID-19 case explosion that threatens to overwhelm local hospitals.

Santa Clara County Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody is admonishing the public to adhere to a stay-at-home orders prohibiging gatherings of any kind between multiple households. The order is in effect throughout the Bay Area at least through Jan. 7.
Santa Clara County Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody is admonishing the public to adhere to a stay-at-home orders prohibiging gatherings of any kind between multiple households. The order is in effect throughout the Bay Area at least through Jan. 7. (Rob Perica/Santa Clara County Public Health Department)

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, CA – When Santa Clara County officials implored residents in the week leading up to Thanksgiving to avoid gatherings outside their immediate household, they were mostly asking the public to take their warnings that holiday gatherings would lead to an explosion of coronavirus cases on faith.

On the eve of another major holiday, officials are again pleading with the public to stay home this Christmas, but this time they have hard data to back up their warning.

Since Nov. 19, a week before Thanksgiving, the county’s average seven-day positivity rate has more than doubled from 3.4 percent to as high as 7.7 percent on Dec. 13.

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On May 27 after more than two months of some of the nation’s toughest lockdown measures the county brought the positivity rate down to 1.3 percent.

The county averaged three deaths per day a week before Thanksgiving. It has nearly doubled to just below six per day.

Find out what's happening in Los Gatosfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The most devastating COVID-19 case surge the county has experienced in the weeks following Thanksgiving is no coincidence according to Public Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody.

"In spite of imploring, begging our community to please not travel and to please not gather, we still had a surge at Thanksgiving," Cody said in a statement Wednesday.

The architect of the Bay Area’s shelter orders that went into effect March 17 is now warning the public that a failure to adhere to admonitions to stay home this holiday season would overwhelm hospital capacity.

Gatherings of any kind between multiple households are prohibited by the state's stay-at-home order, which is in effect in Santa Clara County and the rest of the Bay Area at least through Jan. 7.

"It has taken all of our collective might to try to calm things down," Cody said. "But if we have a surge on top of a surge, we will definitely break. We cannot afford that."

Such a scenario could lead to potentially catastrophic outcomes for anyone who needs urgent care, officials said.

Cody and Dr. Ahmed Kamal, the county's COVID-19 director of health care preparedness, painted a bleak picture of county residents with non-coronavirus maladies like heart attacks and injuries from car accidents being turned away at hospitals because they're filled to capacity with coronavirus patients.

According to Kamal, the county is down to 35 intensive care unit beds, with eight of the county's 10 hospitals having five or fewer ICU beds.

Three of them, he said, have fewer than 10 hospital beds of any kind available.Because of the dearth of beds, nearly 70 emergency room patients on Tuesday had to wait for a hospital bed to open up.

"We are talking about rationing what scarce resources our exhausted health system has left to those who will benefit the most," Kamal said.

"We are talking about people dying who should not have to die."

Gatherings of any kind between multiple households are prohibited by the state's stay-at-home order, which is in effect in Santa Clara County and the rest of the Bay Area at least through Jan. 7.
The county also mandates that residents who travel more than 150 miles away from the county quarantine for 10 days upon their return.

Kamal implored residents to cancel their holiday plans immediately if they have yet to do so, even if those plans included driving to a relatively close destination rather than flying."

I cannot emphasize enough how our collective actions today and tomorrow and the next day are a matter of life and death," he said.

— Bay City News and Patch Editor Gideon Rubin contributed to this report

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