The number of COVID-positive patients at Los Angeles County hospitals has shown a miniscule uptick, increasing by three people to 290, according to the latest state figures. The number of those patients in intensive care was 44 as of Saturday, April 2, down from 47 on Friday, April 1.
The hospitalization number has come down significantly from over 4,800 in mid-January at the height of the Omicron-fueled winter surge, and is generally at its lowest levels since last summer. The latest numbers come one day after LA County and the state marked another milestone in the pandemic by officially lifting the requirement that attendees at indoor mega-events such as sporting events or concerts show proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative test.
It’s the latest pandemic-era mandate to be lifted, following the recent scrapping of rules requiring people to wear masks indoors at most locations. Masks are also no longer required at outdoor mega-events or on school campuses.
Mask-wearing, while no longer mandated in most settings, is still strongly recommended by health officials. Masks also remain mandatory in select locations, such as health-care settings, aboard public transit and airplanes and in airports and transit centers.
County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer noted that whenever major public-health mandates are lifted, there tends to be an uptick in COVID infections as more people interact. She said that is being seen again now locally, with the county’s weeks-long decline in COVID case numbers suddenly leveling off last week.
The county on Friday, April 1, reported 1,167 new COVID infections, notably higher than the 784 reported on Thursday, March 31. Since the pandemic began, the county has recorded a cumulative total of 2,834,317 infections. Another 16 virus-related deaths were reported Friday, raising the county’s overall death toll to 31,683. Health officials have said that the vast majority of people who die of COVID complications have underlying conditions, mainly hypertension, diabetes and heart disease.
Ferrer said the highly infections BA.2 subvariant of COVID-19 was increasing its influence in the county, representing 32% of cases that underwent specialized laboratory sequencing to identify strains of the virus for the week ending March 12. That was nearly double the rate from the previous week. BA.2 has been driving up infection numbers in nations around the world, most notably Australia and parts of Europe.
Ferrer said the strain — an offshoot of the Omicron variant — likely accounts for an even higher percentage of cases locally, since the most recent figures were two weeks old. But she again stressed that the spread of BA.2 has not led to a rise in hospitalizations.
The average daily rate of people testing positive for the virus was 0.9% as of Friday, April 1, down from 1.1% on Thursday, March 31.
The county health department no longer reports COVID data on weekends.
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