Orange County Reports 75 New COVID-19 Cases, Four Deaths

Disneyland Reopens For First Time Since Beginning Of Pandemic

SANTA ANA (CNS) - Orange County on Sunday reported 75 new cases of COVID-19 and four additional deaths.

The number of coronavirus patients in county hospitals increased from 106 Saturday to 111, while the number of intensive care unit patients dropped from 27 to 24.

Sunday's figures pushed the county's total to 253,989 cases and 4,969 fatalities since the pandemic began, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency.

The county had 38.6% of its ICU beds and 76% of its ventilators available.

Orange County continues to see encouraging overall trends regarding the pandemic, officials said.

“They're good,'' Orange County CEO Frank Kim told City News Service on Friday. “Hospitalizations dropped down. I'm happy to see that. But case rates and positivity has been essentially flat. They move up or down one-tenth of a point a day.''

Demand for vaccines from county-run sites has started to decrease, but it could be because people are turning to pharmacies and private health care providers, Kim said. It's difficult to say because there's no central database accessible to county officials to determine how shots are being dispensed, Kim said.

“We're starting to see declines in appointments so we'll start looking at what our phased-down model looks like,'' Kim said. “But we are not going away. As long as somebody wants a vaccine we'll have a (Point of Distribution) or a mobile clinic.''

The county may get more vaccines this week, Kim said.

“We have a sense it might grow, but we don't know yet,'' he said. “We're hearing that some counties are not requesting a full draw-down, so that may make vaccine doses available to counties like us who want more,'' Kim said.

On Sunday, the county's Super POD sites at the Anaheim Convention Center, Soka University and Orange County Fairgrounds were accepting walk-ins as well as anyone with a confirmed appointment.

Orange County's weekly averages for COVID-19 metrics, which are released on Tuesdays, kept it in the orange tier of the state's four-tier economic reopening system, although it meets two of three categories for the least-restrictive yellow tier, according to most recent figures.

The county's weekly averages for adjusted daily case rate per 100,000 residents improved from 2.8 last Tuesday to 2.6.

The overall test positivity rate remained at 1.4%. The county's Health Equity Quartile rate, which measures positivity in hotspots in disadvantaged communities, increased from 1.7% to 1.9%.

The county's positivity rates qualify for the yellow tier, but the case counts are still in the orange tier.

A graduation into the yellow tier requires that the case rate must get below 2 per 100,000 people. A county must maintain metrics for a tier for two weeks before graduating to a less-restrictive level.

Orange County also resumed administering the Johnson & Johnson vaccine Sunday after it was paused at the urging of federal health officials due to rare cases of blood clotting in patients who had received the vaccine. Dr. Clayton Chau, the county's chief public health officer and director of the OCHCA, said he believes the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is “safe and effective'' and that the risk of developing clotting is rare.

The county continues to test at about the state average, Chau said. The county's average last week was 308.8 per 100,000 residents. Another 7,769 tests were logged Sunday, pushing the total to 3,677,081.

Photo: Getty Images

Copyright 2021, City News Service, Inc.


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