LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Los Angeles County has reached a grim milestone, with COVID-19 deaths topping 1,000.
The county Department of Public Health on Tuesday reported 59 more deaths due to the coronavirus, although six of those deaths were reported Monday by Long Beach and Pasadena, which both have their own municipal health agencies. Long Beach and Pasadena both announced two additional deaths Tuesday afternoon, raising countywide fatality total to 1,004.
After announcing that the death toll had reached 1,000, county public health director Barbara Ferrer called it “an unfortunate milestone.”
The fatalities also continued to have a disproportionate impact on the black community. According to the county, of the 918 people who died for whom information was available, 37% were Latinx, 29% were white, 18% were Asian, 14% were black and 1% were Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander. Black residents make up roughly 9% of the county's overall population.
Of the people who have died, 462 were residents of institutional settings, the vast majority of them in nursing homes -- representing 46% of all COVID-19 deaths in the county. Of the 11 health care workers who have died in the county during the pandemic, eight worked at nursing homes, Ferrer said. There have been a total of 4,488 cases among residents and staff in institutional settings, including nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities, assisted living facilities, shelters, jails and prisons, according to the county.
Coronavirus testing has been ramped up at nursing homes throughout the county, with tests being provided for all residents and staff regardless of whether they are showing any symptoms. Ferrer publicly apologized Monday for not offering such widespread testing from the outset of the pandemic, before it was known that people could transmit the virus to others without showing any symptoms of the illness.
The county also issued a revised order last week for nursing homes, barring all non-essential visitors and allowing only essential workers to enter. The order also suspends all communal dining and other activities and requires staff to wear masks and protective equipment, and mandating that residents wear some type of face covering any times they are outside their own rooms.
The county also announced 597 additional coronavirus cases Tuesday, while Long Beach added 20 more and Pasadena added 21, raising the countywide total to 21,017.
Despite the continued increase in numbers of cases and deaths across the state, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday expressed optimism that it could be “weeks, not months” until some of the stay-at-home orders are relaxed, possibly allowing some lower-risk businesses to reopen.
Ferrer said she shared that hope. The county's Safer At Home order is currently scheduled to expire May 15.
“I think we're all with the governor on this,” Ferrer said. “... We know that we're headed into recovery. We're hoping that happens sometime in the middle of May, that's our best guess right now.”
But she said a decision to ease social-distancing and business-closure requirements will depend on multiple factors that have been previously identified, including hospital capacity, the expansion of testing and ensuring the ability to continue protecting the health of people more susceptible to the virus.
“We all have to work together. We have to partner with all of our businesses, with all of our residents to make sure as we start relaxing, we do so in a way that maximizes our ability to still do a lot of physical distancing.
“... But I do share the governor's optimism. I think I owe a huge debt of gratitude to all of the people in L.A. County who are staying home, who are doing their very best to protect themselves and their loved ones who are trying really hard to make sure they don't spread the infection. And because of that, I feel optimistic, come the middle of May, we too will be looking at the ability to relax some of the directives in the current health officer order.”
In another sign of optimism, Gov. Gavin Newsom suggested Tuesday that scools across the state could open early for the fall, possibly in late July or early August, to make up for missed class time due to the coronavirus campus closures.
But Newsom said the idea is only under consideration, and officials said more study needs to be done to ensure students will be protected with campuses reopen their doors.
Newsom, speaking during his daily coronavirus update, said that while school districts statewide are engaging in distance-learning efforts, he knows there has been “learning loss” among students that needs to be recouped.
Los Angeles County Superintendent of Schools Debra Duardo said she has convened a task force of superintendents from across the county to consider plans for reopening campuses in the summer or fall.
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