L.A. County COVID-19 Cases Top 15,000

Coronavirus Pandemic Causes Climate Of Anxiety And Changing Routines In America

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Los Angeles police officers will be stationed today at 16 sites across the city to “keep the peace” during the distribution of prepaid debit cards to qualified applicants who have been financially affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Mayor's Fund for Los Angeles will distribute the prepaid debit cards, which are pre-loaded with $700, $1,100 or $1,500, depending on the size of the household of the recipients. More than 455,000 people, including some from outside the city of Los Angeles and California, applied for the cards, which are valued at about $10 million in total.

The Mayor's Fund for Los Angeles is a nonprofit organization separate from city finances.

Meantime, the number of coronavirus cases in Los Angeles County was at 15,140 this morning and the number of deaths in the county due to COVID-19 was 666, with Pasadena officials reporting three additional fatalities. The county's public health director, Barbara Ferrer, announced 1,400 new cases overall, although 880 of those were due to a newly cleared backlog of earlier testing results.

Officials in Long Beach -- which has its own health department -- subsequently announced 13 additional cases, and Pasadena, which also has its own health agency, announced 12 more, raising the county total to 15,165.

Of the people who have died, ethnic/race data was available for only 582 people. Of those, 36% were Latinx, 28% white, 18% Asian and 16% black, continuing the trend of a disproportionate percentage of black and Asian residents dying from the illness.

A total of 269 institutional settings -- including nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities, assisted living facilities, shelters, jails and prisons -- have had at least one case. Those institutions have accounted for a total of 2,913 cases, involving 1,692 residents and 1,221 staff members. They also account for 255 deaths, or roughly 38% of all coronavirus fatalities in the county. The “vast majority” of those deaths were in skilled nursing facilities, according to the county.

One institution that has been particularly hard hit is the Union Rescue Mission on Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles. Ferrer said when multiple cases were confirmed at the facility, a “broad testing strategy” was implemented, with more than 200 people tested. She said initial results showed 43 people testing positive, 27 of them never showing any symptoms. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti later said 227 people were tested, and 56 of them were positive for the virus.

Coronavirus Testing Takes Place On L.A.'s Skid Row

Ferrer said county public health officials began working with the mission since the first case there was confirmed March 28.

“Because there are a large number of guests at Union Rescue Mission, we have continued to work closely with the facility and efforts have been made in large part thanks to the gracious help of the director and their staff to decompress the shelter to allow for maximum physical distancing on each of their floors,” Ferrer said.

“... The Union Rescue Mission has also agreed to quarantine everyone who's at the site, and to no longer admit new guests while we try to control the outbreak,” she said. “Staff and guests that are remaining on site are being asked to practice physical distancing and wear their cloth face coverings as they're quarantined. They've also enhanced their daily screening and their deep-cleaning practices.”

A staff member at the mission died from the virus earlier this month.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said the bulk of positive cases at the mission originated in a men's dorm at the facility. He also noted that the mission “had 1,200 people crammed in there.”

“In a crisis like this, I know that that comes from a heart of not wanting to turn away anybody, but that was a danger and is a danger to anybody to have people crammed in that much,” Garcetti said. “So it's been decompressed now to 400 people.”

Ferrer said 184 people who were staying at the mission have been moved to hotels or motels nearby. She said 112 people who were close contacts with confirmed patients or who were showing symptoms have been placed in isolation, while 72 residents who determined to be “medically vulnerable” were placed at hotels included in the statewide Project Roomkey program.

County health officials are holding daily meetings with mission officials and an environmental health team is inspecting the facility every other day to ensure property infection-control measures are in place, Ferrer said.

As of Tuesday, more than 89,000 people have been tested in the county, with about 14% of them testing positive.

Responding to recent protests in other cities calling for a lifting of public-health restrictions and business closures, Ferrer and Supervisor Hilda Solis both said social-distancing measures are still needed to prevent another surge in cases.

“The weather is getting beautiful, and we share your desire to have a plan for recovery. As I mentioned last week, in order for us to be able to safely relax our Safer At Home order, we need to make sure that we do this in a way that doesn't result in a surge in hospitalizations and deaths. And that we're able to care for people who are sick and need health-care services.”

She said the county is working with health care facilities to prepare for possible surges in COVID-19 cases while also treating people with other health issues.

“We can't reopen safely until we make sure we protect those that are most vulnerable,” she said.

Solis also said that summer-like weather anticipated over the next few days should not lull residents into a sense of security, saying, “Now is the time for us to continue staying at home. This order remains in place to protect you,” she said.

She said county officials will be working closely with the state when it comes to decisions regarding reopening businesses and lifting stay-at-home orders. She said that “just because there are voices” calling for restrictions to be lifted, those decisions will rely on data and science.

“We know that we can't be foolish,” she said.

Photos: Getty Images


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