Originally Posted by
jimcav
Perhaps I should have said right off that I share your concern, but I also think it reflects more variant cases than they realize, and worry other areas may follow suit. I agree with what you posted above almost 100%, maybe it is 100%, as I think LA didn't do enough outside the "knowledge" economy, and your phrasing it that way makes me think we agree that there wasn't enough done for the lower income "essential" workers who are exactly the people most impacted. I saw a special last year on PBS about SoCal Hispanic workers and it was simply awful in terms of safety/prevention for that population. Granted the focus of the show was agriculture, and how any exposures were made much worse due to the multi-generational and often multi-family housing situations; but I 've seen other similar articles that talked about how other areas did a terrible job in similar work settings.
Yes, to clarify the higher CFRs were for surges in European Countries, some into low double digits. I haven't searched CDC data for USA CFRs. Some of the new variants have the potential to offset much of what US HCW have achieved in terms of success of care. Hopefully vaccination will keep pace ahead of surges in variant cases. I keep trying to find out what percent of C-19 tests are being genetically analyzed for variant analysis, but my google searching hasn't really answered it. I have assumed LA has the UK variant as dominant now, but it doesn't seem that they test enough to know.
As an example, here is the LA county release from 3/24:
"Public Health continues to track variant cases in Los Angeles County. Among 73 specimens analyzed at the Public Health Laboratory this past week, 25 cases, or 34% of the specimens analyzed, were the California variant of concern, identified as B.1.427 or 429, and 21 cases, or 29% of the specimens analyzed, were the U.K. variant of concern, B.1.1.7. This means 63% of the variants sequenced this past week are variants of concern with the probability of increased transmissibility and more severe disease. Los Angeles County has yet to identify cases of the South African variant or the Brazilian variant of concern, the P.1 variant. Other variants of interest that were detected included 8 cases of the New York variant and 1 case of the Brazilian variant of interest P.2. While these variants are still considered only variants of interest (and not variants of concern), their presence indicates transmission of mutated viruses from across the globe"
I can't fathom how they think analyzing 73 tests a week gives any adequate representation of what is going on in the county. By 3/24, San Diego County had already confirmed 58 cases of P1 variant (brazil), and to think we have it, but somehow LA doesn't, is beyond stupid.
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