Health & Fitness
Coronavirus Death Toll Now 70 In San Diego County
The county reported 71 new COVID-19 Friday and seven additional deaths, raising the region's numbers to 2,158 cases and 70 deaths.
SAN DIEGO COUNTY, CA — San Diego County officials told the public Friday that efforts to stem the spread of COVID-19 were working, but focus was slipping, which could undo the region's progress.
The county reported 71 new cases of novel coronavirus Friday and seven additional deaths, raising the county numbers to 2,158 cases and 70 deaths.
County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said even with the updated numbers, members of the public were largely doing their part to avoid spreading the illness.
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He cited data from a mobility tracker, which analyzes how often people travel to certain locations, and found that people are traveling more than they were a week ago. This could be an aberration or a sign that people are taking stay-at-home orders less seriously, he said.
Travel to retail grocery stores and pharmacies increased by 11% of the pre-COVID-19 baseline, which Fletcher said might be expected as people may no longer be stockpiling groceries and thus needed to shop more often. However, transit station visits jumped by 6%, retail visits by 5% and park visits by 2%.
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"We're seeing this slippage," he said. "I encourage you to hold fast."
How long people are expected to hold fast is up for debate, but County Chairman Greg Cox, San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer and other officials from around the region will soon convene the San Diego Economic Recovery Advisory Group to lay out a plan to reopen the county post-pandemic.
"This group will focus not on the 'when' but on the 'how,"' Cox said. "It will be guided by medical data."
Dr. Wilma Wooten, San Diego's Public Health Officer, said any plan to reopen the region would begin by meeting a set of metrics similar to that set by the state of California, including declining test percentages — the county and local hospitals are still returning around 93% of all tests negative — and declining incidences of flu-like illnesses in local emergency departments.
"We're not there yet," she said. "I use the word `yet' because if we lessen up, we could lose ground. We are not there yet, but we have made a tremendous stride and effort and we are getting there."
Friday's deaths include three women — one in her early 60s and two in their early 90s — and four men, one in his late 50s, another in his mid- 60s and two in their mid-70s.
The county has now tested more than 30,000 individuals for COVID-19.
The number of hospitalizations increased to 524, an increase of 17 from Thursday. There have been 181 patients treated in intensive care units, the county reported. That number has not changed from Thursday's report, the first time that has been true in several weeks. Fletcher said the county estimates that 1,042 people have recovered from the illness, nearly half the total number of cases.
Fletcher said the county's "doubling rate" for hospitalizations was 12 days; ICU admittance was 18 days; and the days it would take to double the number of deaths was 7. The data is a five-day average model with outlier "smoothing" to give a better picture of the county's situation.
Of the deaths in which race/ethnicity was tracked, 53% were white, 36% Latino and 6.9% Asian. Race or ethnicity has not been established in 12 deaths.
Wooten confirmed one new community outbreak — defined as three or more cases that can be traced back to one location and/or incident — raising the county outbreak total to 36, tied to 397 cases and 41 deaths.
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Fletcher reported COVID-19 tests have begun at the San Diego Convention Center, with a trial run of 53 tests completed Thursday. Of those, 34 were negative and 19 are still pending.
On Thursday, Fletcher reported another confirmed case in a homeless individual, raising positive tests in that population to 15.
Family Health Centers of San Diego, San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency and the city of San Diego will offer the free and voluntary tests to 150 people each day until everyone housed in the convention center has been tested for the respiratory illness.
"This preemptive testing will identify and contain the virus earlier if it is present, helping staff respond proactively and get people into treatment sooner," Faulconer said Thursday. "Anyone experiencing homelessness who comes into the convention center will receive health monitoring and treatment that's critical to both their personal well-being and the health of the broader community."
Fletcher said the tests will be done to ensure the privacy of individuals, and positive-testing shelter residents will be quickly isolated before being transported to a public health hotel room where they can recuperate.
Father Joe's Villages reported Thursday morning it had moved many clients to the convention center from the now-vacant Golden Hall and had reduced the number of beds at shelters it operates to increase social distancing.
Two more San Diego police officers have tested positive for COVID-19, Faulconer announced Thursday. One works in the Southern Division, which oversees areas such as San Ysidro and Otay Mesa. The other works at the department's headquarters, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.
Two other SDPD officers have tested positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic began.
Also see:
- California Coronavirus: Latest Updates On Cases, Orders, Closures
- Coronavirus In San Diego County: Latest News
- San Diego Advisory Group To Develop Phased Reopening Plan
- 7 More Deaths As Coronavirus Cases Surpass 2,000 In San Diego
- Coronavirus Cases Surpass 1,000 Milestone In San Diego County
- Face Coverings Urged As Coronavirus Cases Rise In San Diego
- San Diego Authorities To Crack Down On Stay-At-Home Violators
— City News Service