Keep Local News Thriving in the San Fernando Valley.

Support the San Fernando Valley Sun Today!

$
$
$

Your contribution is appreciated.

Subscribe to our newsletter

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

  • News
    • Local
    • National
    • World
  • Valley Sportscape
  • lifestyles
    • Food, Dining and Recipes
    • Health & Family
    • Horoscope
    • Home and Garden
    • Peter’s Garage
  • Opinion
    • Letter to the Editor
    • COMMENTARY
    • Polls
  • Money
  • Calendar
    • Calendar of Events
    • Submit an Event
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
    • Register Your DBA
    • Legals & Public Notices
    • Public Notices
  • Obituaries
    • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • El Sol
  • Local
  • Mundo
  • Horoscopo
  • Deportes
  • Entretenimiento
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
    • Media Kit
    • Legals
    • Obituary
    • Classifieds
  • Register Your DBA
  • Subscription Services
    • Subscribe to the newsletter
    • Paid Mailed Subscription
  • E-Editions
    • The Sun
    • El Sol
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Support Us
Skip to content
SF Sun logo

The San Fernando Valley Sun

Your Bilingual Community Newspaper for the Entire San Fernando Valley

El Sol
Posted innews/local

Health Officials Warn of Rising ICU Admissions Due to COVID

by SFVS Staff January 19, 2022January 19, 2022

Share this:

LOS ANGELES (CNS) — The percentage of COVID-19-positive hospital patients admitted to intensive care units in Los Angeles County is slowly rising, despite suggestions that the Omicron variant of the virus causes less severe infections, health officials said. 

According to the county Department of Public Health, average daily hospital admissions of people with COVID are also rising from 588 per day the week ending Jan. 11 to 644 the week that ended Monday, Jan. 17. 

During that same period, the percentage of COVID-positive patients admitted to the ICU went from 25% to 31%, and the percentage of patients requiring ventilation jumping from 20% to 27%. 

“Let’s not fool ourselves by not recognizing the danger presented by the Omicron variant which is capable of spreading with lightning speed and causing serious illness among our most vulnerable residents,” County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement.  

“Since the beginning of the pandemic, we have recognized that while many experience mild illness from COVID, there are others, who we love and need, that will not do well if they become infected. 

“And while vaccines and boosters provide powerful protection, those who are older, have serious health conditions or are immunocompromised remain at higher risk,” she said. “We still don’t know the longer-term consequences from Omicron infections, including the development of long COVID or MIS-C among children.” 

According to state figures, there were 4,701 COVID-positive people in county hospitals as of Tuesday, up from 4,564 a day earlier. The number of those patients in the ICU was 680, up from 621 on Monday. 

While the overall COVID hospitalization number remains below last winter’s peak of more than 8,000, health officials stressed that the rising patient population is creating strain at hospitals that were already coping with staffing shortages. Those shortages have been exacerbated by COVID cases among healthcare workers, which have also been rising. 

Latest News

Weekly Update of Valley Area COVID-19 Cases 

Pro-Choice Organizations Consider Next Steps in Fight to Save Federal Abortion Rights

President Signs Cárdenas’ Safe Sleep for Babies Act Into Law

Últimas Noticias

Aquellos que Rechazan la Vacunación en el Nombre de Dios

Horóscopo

EVENTOS Locales – Semana de 19 de mayo, 2022 

Nuevos Estudios de Cine y Televisión en Construcción en Sylmar

Between Jan. 7-13, a total of 1,268 COVID cases were reported among healthcare workers in the county, a 30% jump from the week of Dec. 31, when 973 were reported, according to the county. 

“So please continue to do your part in slowing the spread of Omicron to help us keep ourselves and our loved ones healthy and out of the hospital,” Ferrer said. “Wear a well-fitted medical-grade mask any time indoors or at crowded outdoor locations and curtail high-risk activities during surge. And please stay away from others if you are infected or sick. Working together to reduce infections is still an essential strategy.” 

She again urged people to get vaccinated and called on those who are vaccinated to get boosters.  

According to the county, people who are vaccinated are six times less likely to wind up in a hospital ICU than the unvaccinated. 

People who are vaccinated and boosted are 25 times less likely to be admitted to an ICU. 

The county on Tuesday, Jan. 18, reported 37 additional COVID-related deaths, lifting the overall county death toll from the virus to 28,122. Another 22,688 new infections were also reported, giving the county a pandemic total of 2,311,568. 

The death and case numbers reported Tuesday are likely artificially low, due to delays in reporting from the MLK holiday weekend. 

The average daily rate of people testing positive for the virus continued a downward trend Tuesday, falling slightly to 16.3%. That’s down from 16.5% on Monday. The rate was more than 20% a week ago. 

The downward trend in testing positivity is an upbeat sign but could also be the natural result of a dramatic upswing in the overall number of people getting tested in recent weeks, particularly as schools resumed classes after the winter break. 

A month ago, the testing-positivity rate was just 2%. 

A new county health order took effect Monday requiring employers to provide employees with upgraded masks, such as N95, KN95 or KF94. Ferrer said all residents should consider wearing such upgraded face coverings when mingling in public, rather than cloth ones.

Related

  • County COVID Spread Rising, Possibly Falling Out of “Low” Virus Risk Category
  • May 18, 2022
  • In "News"
  • COVID-Related Deaths in LA County Reach 32,000 Mark
  • May 11, 2022
  • In "News"
  • LA County to Begin Offering 2nd Booster Doses of COVID Vaccine
  • March 30, 2022
  • In "News"
Tagged: no-byline

Latest News

  • Weekly Update of Valley Area COVID-19 Cases 
  • Pro-Choice Organizations Consider Next Steps in Fight to Save Federal Abortion Rights
  • President Signs Cárdenas’ Safe Sleep for Babies Act Into Law
  • State Assembly Advances Bill to Crack Down on Street Racing and Illegal Sideshows
  • County COVID Spread Rising, Possibly Falling Out of “Low” Virus Risk Category

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Support Us

About Us

A newspaper of historical dimensions, the San Fernando Sun has been publishing continuously since 1904 reflecting the valley’s historical and cultural development. Today, as in those pioneering days, the weekly San Fernando Sun leads the valley residents with insightful editorial, community involvement and valuable consumer information.

Contact Us

sanfernandosun.com
1150 San Fernando Road Suite 100
San Fernando, CA 91340
Phone: (818) 365-3111
Email: production@sanfernandosun.com

 

© 2022 Your Bilingual Community Newspaper for the Entire San Fernando Valley. Proudly powered by Newspack by Automattic
Exit mobile version