LOS ANGELES – More than 1,600 new cases of COVID-19 were reported in Los Angeles County Tuesday, the largest single-day jump during the pandemic.
In the Antelope Valley, there were 470 reported cases in Palmdale, 353 cases in Lancaster, 29 cases in Quartz Hill, 22 cases in Lake Los Angeles, 18 cases in the Littlerock/Pearblossom, Juniper Hills areas, and seven reported cases in Sun Village, as of Tuesday, May 5, according to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. View the latest report here.
Barbara Ferrer, director of the county’s Department of Public Health, noted that the large number of new cases — 1,638 — was due in part to a lag in testing data that typically occurs over the weekend, but it was also the result of ever-increasing availability of testing.
The new cases lifted the county’s overall total to 27,815.
Ferrer also reported another 58 deaths due to the coronavirus. The new deaths increased the county’s total number of fatalities to 1,313.
Of the 1,201 people who died for which ethnic data was available, 38% were Latinx, 28% were white, 19% Asian, 12% black and 1% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander. The numbers continued a trend showing a disproportionate impact of the virus on the black and Native Hawaiian communities in the county.
“When we present the information by percentages it often masks the fact that if we looked at actual mortality rates, our African-American and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander neighbors and families are dying at a much higher rate than all others in L.A. County,” Ferrer said.
Nearly half of the county’s COVID-19 deaths, 49%, have occurred in institutional settings, primarily skilled nursing facilities. Ferrer said there have been 647 deaths among residents of such facilities. At least one confirmed or suspected case was being investigated at 342 institutions as of midday Tuesday. Ferrer noted that investigations at 19 other facilities had been closed because no new cases at those locations have been reported in the past 14 days.
There have been 199 cases reported among the county’s homeless population, 109 of which involved people who were in shelters.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday announced that the state will be relaxing its stay-at-home order at the end of the week, allowing lower-risk retail businesses to reopen with limited operations, primarily restricted to curbside pickup.
Although the state will be issuing guidelines for such business reopenings, individual counties will still have the ability to maintain tighter restrictions depending on the virus’ local impact. Los Angeles County has been particularly hard hit, accounting for roughly half of the state’s cases and deaths, while housing only about a quarter of the overall population.
Ferrer said Tuesday that the county will be releasing details soon on a “road map” for businesses, but it remained unclear if the county will be more restrictive than the state in terms of business restrictions.
“The county’s approach to reopening is guided by the science and by the current status of our pandemic locally. And we’re all looking forward to businesses reopening and getting back to work, and we all know we’re going to be on a slow journey together so we can continue to save lives and prevent overwhelming our health care system,” Ferrer said.
She again noted that the decision-making will depend on factors such as availability of hospital space and equipment, the availability of testing, the ability to trace contacts of those who test positive, and the continued impact of the virus on higher-risk populations. She noted that there will almost assuredly be more cases reported once businesses reopen, because more people will be “out and about,” but the county does not want to see a spike in the mortality rate, forcing the county “to have to go back and tell businesses to close again.”
“We have to do everything we can to be on a steady, slow path to recovery that makes sense for L.A. County,” Ferrer said.
She said planning for businesses to reopen will likely be in conjunction with Newsom’s anticipated guidelines, but she said she could not yet offer any specifics of what local retailers can expect.
“You’ve noticed how hard we’re all trying to be united across the state whenever it’s possibile, so I think it’s in that spirit that we look at what the governor is doing, and we try to make sure that we can align as is appropriate given the unique circumstances here in the county,” Ferrer said. “But I do promise you and all the retail businesses, you will hear from us shortly about what is the plan for L.A. County as we work together, look at all the information and make sure that we can move in a way that’s safe or as safe as possible for everyone.”
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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Jesus says
Here we go with the fear mongering
Max says
If you still believe in this stuff you a retard
Dale Holt says
Wow, over 300,000 people in the antelope Valley and of course the cesspool that’s called palmdale has < 500 cases. Overhyped and overblown much? Typical media hyperbole!
William says
Dale Holt
That’s why thousands of big companies shut down months ago before they were ordered because it’s a big hoax. Over 70,000 people have died in the country. But, you know best.
How many ocean front lots have you bought in the Antelope Valley? You seem gullible.
Chris Bailey says
I am personally concerned about hospitalizations, not new cases.
Dianne says
Wow unfreedom of the press!
Dianne says
18 deaths in the AV & 15 in SCV we need to leave LA County because the LA County department of health failed with 49% loss coming from nursing homes that have never been well regulated to begin with.
Horrific management by LA County Health dept concentrating effort in the wrong place costing lives