LOS ANGELES – Sixty-two more COVID-19 deaths were reported in Los Angeles County Friday and health officials warned that people with the virus can spread it longer than originally thought.
In the Antelope Valley, there were 417 reported cases and nine deaths in Palmdale, 321 cases and six deaths in Lancaster, 27 cases and four deaths in Quartz Hill, 17 cases and two deaths in Lake Los Angeles, 13 cases and no deaths in the Littlerock/Pearblossom, Juniper Hills areas, and six reported cases and no deaths in Sun Village, as of 2 p.m. Friday, May 1, according to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.
The county’s death toll from the coronavirus rose to 1,172 on Friday, with county health director Barbara Ferrer announcing 1,065 more confirmed cases of COVID-19, raising the overall total to 24,215.
As has been the case throughout the pandemic, 92% of the people who died from the virus had underlying health conditions, and the virus continued to have a disproportionate impact on communities of color.
For the 1,065 deaths for which data was available, 38% were Latinx, 29% white, 19% Asian, 13% black and 1% Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander.
Los Angeles County continues to represent about half of the cases and deaths across the state. Gov. Gavin Newsom announced earlier Friday that the state had crossed the grim milestone of 2,000 overall deaths, with a total of 2,073. As of Friday, the state as a whole had 50,442 confirmed cases.
Citing new guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Ferrer said people who test positive for the virus or are believed to be positive must now isolate themselves for 10 days, plus an additional 72 hours after symptoms dissipate. The previous guidance called for seven days of isolation, plus 72 symptom-free hours.
“There’s new evidence that suggests that the virus may shed for a longer period of time, which means that a person may be able to infect other people for a longer period of time than was initially thought,” she said.
“If you now test positive for COVID-19 or you’ve been told by your provider that you’re likely to be positive for the virus, you need to immediately self-isolate,” Ferrer said. “And this means staying home and staying away from all other people and pets as much as possible all of the time. Please do not prepare or serve meals for your family, and please don’t share utensils, cups or food with others. If you’re a caregiver it would be important for you to find someone else in your family to perform daily activities that have you in close contact with others.”
Ferrer said there have been 106 known instances of pregnant women who tested positive. According to Ferrer, 26 of those women have completed their pregnancies and successfully gave birth, but one woman lost her baby.
“Our hearts go out to the family that did lose a baby from their pregnancy,” she said.
She said the county is investigating confirmed or suspected cases at 316 institutional settings, including nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities, assisted living facilities, shelters, jails and prisons.
There have been a total of 5,658 cases at such institutional settings, and 564 residents have died, representing 48% of all COVID-19 deaths in the county. The majority of people who have died in institutional settings lived in skilled nursing facilities, Ferrer said.
Ferrer cautioned people to continue adhering to the social- distancing orders, warning that the virus is very much alive.
“The conditions we faced in February and March and April haven’t changed significantly,” she said. “We still have a new virus that is easily spread among people who are in close contact with each other. Ninety-five percent of us have still not been infected and until there’s a vaccine, most residents in L.a. County can be infected at any time over the months to come.
“Recovery will help us get people back to work, but without taking extraordinary measures to reduce our exposures to people who are infected and to keep our distance as much as possible, we could easily see a big spike in new cases.”
An interactive dashboard is available that provides an overview on COVID-19 testing, cases and deaths along with maps and graphs showing testing, cases and death data by city/community. To view Public Health’s COVID-19 Surveillance Dashboard, visit: http://dashboard.publichealth.lacounty.gov/covid19_surveillance_dashboard/
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Dianne says
This morning I read that there are 15 people in ICU at Henry Mayo in Santa Clarita. Although I have searched everywhere I cannot find the important statistics for the AV as to how many people are in the ICU in our hospitals. How many have recovered, how many had underlying conditions, how many were in nursing homes, what is the exact age demographic and how many specifically have passed in our area. I also wonder how many people will die due to the inability to receive biopsies, follow-up cancer screenings, suicide, alcoholism, drug, spousal & child abuse. The unintended consequence.
Crossroads says
@ teacher stop living in a bubble
Teacher in AV says
I wonder how many of these cases are hospitalized or if they’re mild and are quarantining at home. I like when reports are thorough. Here they JUST recently offered the number of deaths in the report. I’m glad we don’t have staggering amounts although one death is too many. We need to keep doing our part in staying home as much as possible and using precaution when we have to be out. The more people resist and don’t comply, the longer it will take for this virus to go away. I’ve been at home for more than two months now and only go out when absolutely necessary. I buy most of my things online and only grocery shop in person and I can tell you, it is absolutely possible. I am doing my part as a responsible community member. Please stop to think about all those self-employed people and the ones who are out of work. They need to go back to work, but if this virus is not completely or dramatically diminished, we won’t be able to go back to a somewhat normal life.