With a holiday weekend upon us, Los Angeles County health officials urged residents again Friday to mark Memorial Day with caution to prevent spread of COVID-19.
“As we celebrate Memorial Day this Monday, I’d like to extend my gratitude to all of our armed forces members and their families who have dedicated their lives to protecting us through their military service,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement. “Many of us will attend events or host gatherings honoring these courageous men and women this long weekend. Regardless of how you plan to spend the holiday, we ask that you reduce the chance of getting or spreading COVID-19 by taking advantage of four powerful tools — vaccinations, masking, testing, and therapeutics.”
The urging came amid rising infection numbers and steadily increasing virus-related hospitalization figures.
On Friday, May 27, the county reported 5,800 new cases, raising the cumulative total from throughout the pandemic to 2,961,673. According to state figures, there were 455 COVID-positive patients in county hospitals, up from 429 on Thursday. The number of those patients being treated in intensive care was 55, the same as the previous day. Health officials have noted that many of the COVID-positive patients were admitted to hospitals for reasons other than the virus. But Ferrer said those patients still require advanced levels of care that put added stress on hospitals.
“They require a lot of different resources that are of higher intensity, so that in and of itself is more strain on the system,” Ferrer said.
The county Friday also reported eight more COVID-related deaths, giving the county a death toll from throughout the pandemic of 32,117. The average daily rate of people testing positive for the virus was 4.3% as of Friday, up from 4.1% Thursday. Ferrer announced that increasing case number across the county have led to a rise in virus outbreaks at skilled nursing facilities, prompting some tighter infection-control measures. Staff at nursing facilities are now required to wear N95-level masks at all times and undergo twice-weekly testing, while residents must undergo weekly testing. All communal dining has also been halted, and all non-essential indoor group activities are being paused.
Los Angeles County remains in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s “medium” category of virus activity. Under CDC guidelines, counties in the “medium” category will move to “high” if the rate of new virus-related hospital admissions reaches 10 per 100,000 residents, or if 10% of the county’s staffed hospital beds are occupied by COVID-positive patients.
Ferrer said the county’s current rate of virus-related hospital admissions is now 4.5 per 100,000 — double the rate from a month ago — and the rate of staffed beds occupied by COVID patients is currently 2.3%.
While those numbers are well below the “high” category level, Ferrer noted that “if we continue on the current trajectory, we could find cases and hospitalizations end up exerting stress on our hospital system in just a few weeks.”
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