Coronavirus

More California counties exit CDC’s ‘high’ level for COVID-19 as summer surge eases

Coronavirus infection and hospitalization rates continue to fall in California, leading the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to downgrade risk levels this week for several counties in the state’s Central Valley.

The California Department of Public Health in a Friday update reported the statewide case rate for COVID-19 at 21.9 per 100,000, down 17% in the past week.

The latest test positivity rate is 10%, down from 10.5% one week earlier and from July’s peak of 16.2%. The state’s positivity is at its lowest point since mid-June.

CDPH on Friday reported 3,143 virus patients in California hospital beds, a 12% drop from one week earlier. The latest tally includes 387 in intensive care units, down 10% in the past week.

Transmission rates in California climbed from late March through early July, state health data show, as contagious subvariants of omicron such as BA.2, BA.4 and BA.5 displaced previously dominant variants.

As of a Friday update from the CDC on COVID-19 variant proportions, BA.5 and its sister variants BA.4 and BA.4.6 combined for 99.8% of recent cases nationwide, and the same percentage for the region that includes California.

CDC classifies 7 California counties in ‘high’ level

Seven California counties — down from 14 last week — remained in the CDC’s “high” community level for COVID-19 danger as of Thursday’s weekly update: Imperial, Kern, Kings, Madera, Merced, Monterey and Ventura. The CDC calls for masking in public indoor settings in counties classified in the high level.

The counties departing the high level this week were Fresno, Humboldt, San Benito, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tuolumne and Yuba. All returned to the CDC’s medium community level. Imperial was the only California county this week to revert from medium to high.

Twenty-nine counties, including the four-county capital region of Sacramento, El Dorado, Placer and Yolo, as well as Los Angeles, are now in the CDC’s medium community level.

The state’s remaining 22 counties are in the CDC’s low level, including the Bay Area counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco and San Mateo; Amador, Colusa, Nevada, Sutter, Tehama and Yuba counties in Northern California; and Riverside County in Southern California.

Community level assignments have improved across the state as case and hospital admission numbers have steadily declined since about mid-July across most of the state.

Are omicron-targeted vaccine boosters coming soon?

Pfizer and Moderna filed applications with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this week seeking authorization to give “bivalent” COVID-19 booster vaccines specifically targeted toward the omicron strains, including currently dominant BA.4 and BA.5.

With the FDA reviewing the new boosters, and a key CDC advisory panel meeting Sept. 1-2, omicron-targeted vaccine boosters could be distributed as early as next month.

Second booster doses in the U.S. are currently limited to those ages 50 and older or with certain health conditions. First booster doses are recommended for everyone 5 and older.

State vaccination data show that 72% of all Californians have received their “primary series” of a COVID-19 vaccine – two doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. But only 59% have received their primary series and at least one booster.

That means more than 12 million Californians have been vaccinated but are not boosted, according to CDPH.

Nearly two years into the vaccination campaign, inoculation rates continue to vary widely by geographic region.

The six counties with the highest booster rates — San Francisco, Marin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Alameda and Contra Costa, all in the Bay Area — all have more than 70% of residents vaccinated and boosted. In 32 of the state’s 58 counties, fewer than 60% are vaccinated and boosted. In 13 counties, fewer than half have had a booster.

Sacramento-area numbers by county

Sacramento County’s latest case rate is 20.4 per 100,000 residents, state health officials said in Friday’s update, an 8% decrease from one week earlier.

Hospitals in Sacramento County were treating 167 virus patients Thursday, state data show, down from 180 one week earlier. The intensive care unit increased to 24 from 23.

Placer County’s latest case rate is 13.7 per 100,000 residents, a 10% decrease from one week earlier.

Hospitals in Placer County were treating 70 virus patients Thursday, down from 77 one week earlier. The ICU total decreased to 10 from 13.

Yolo County’s latest case rate is 13.5 per 100,000 residents, a 20% decrease from one week earlier.

Hospitals in Yolo County were treating eight virus patients Thursday, up from three a week earlier. The ICU total increased to two from zero.

El Dorado County’s latest case rate is 10.4 per 100,000 residents, a 17% decrease from one week earlier.

Hospitals in El Dorado County were treating three virus patients Thursday, down from eight a week earlier. The ICU total remained at one.

Sutter County’s latest case rate is 26.2 per 100,000 residents, down 5% compared to last week, and Yuba County’s is 22.3, down 1%, state health officials reported Friday.

The only hospital in Yuba County, which serves the Yuba-Sutter bicounty area, was treating 10 virus patients Thursday, the same as one week earlier. The ICU total remained at two.

Michael McGough
The Sacramento Bee
Michael McGough is a sports and local editor for The Sacramento Bee. He previously covered breaking news and COVID-19 for The Bee, which he joined in 2016. He is a Sacramento native and graduate of Sacramento State. 
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