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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money

California shatters daily COVID-19 record with more than 62,000 new cases as hospital conditions worsen

LOS ANGELES — California once again shattered a new daily record for most number of coronavirus cases in a single day on Monday, a troubling sign days before a Christmas holiday that officials fear could bring still greater spread of the virus.

A preliminary county-by-county tally conducted by the Los Angeles Times for Monday found at least 62,000 new coronavirus cases reported — the most in a single day since Friday, when 53,326 coronavirus cases were reported.

The state is now averaging at least 44,000 new coronavirus cases a day over the past week — more than seven times the comparable figure from six weeks ago.

The Times’ tally found at least 252 COVID-19 deaths across California Monday, which would be one of the highest single-death tallies so far in the pandemic. California is now averaging at least 247 COVID-19 deaths every day over the past week, a new record and more than five times the comparable tally from six weeks ago.

L.A. County has reported an average of 84 COVID-19 deaths a day over the past week — six times the comparable number from six weeks ago. The county is also reporting nearly 15,000 new coronavirus cases every day over the past week, nearly eight times the comparable figure from six weeks ago.

On Monday, L.A. County reported 12,398 new coronavirus cases and 60 COVID-19 deaths.

More Californians are dying from the disease than ever before. The state has averaged 233 daily deaths over the last week, more than double the number two weeks ago, according to data compiled by the Times.

More than 2,700 Californians have died from COVID-19 over the last 14 days, a staggering number that accounts for 12% of the state’s 22,600-plus fatalities.

Those numbers serve as a “sober, sober reminder of how deadly this disease is, and how tragic the loss of every life is,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday.

Sweeping restrictions on businesses and activities are expected to remain in place past their original expiration date across a wide swath of California, as the availability of precious intensive care beds continues to dwindle in the face of an unrelenting COVID-19 surge.

Though nothing is definite yet, Newsom acknowledged Monday that the stay-at-home orders issued for Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley will likely need to be extended.

The two regions — which cover 23 of California’s 58 counties — are technically eligible to emerge from the state order beginning next week.

However, as Newsom noted, it’s doubtful either will do so, as both have seen a steady erosion in their stocks of intensive care unit beds that are available to treat COVID-19 patients.

As of Monday, the ICU availability in both regions remained at 0%, state figures show.

Available ICU capacity effectively maxed last week in Los Angeles County, and as of 9 a.m. Sunday, a point-in-time survey found that there were only 30 available ICU beds in this county of 10 million people; significantly down from a tally last week that found 69.

L.A. County Health Services Director Dr. Christina Ghaly said emergency departments are slammed across the county. Over the weekend, one hospital struggled to both care for a high number of COVID-19 patients while treating critical injuries suffered by a large family struck by a suspected drunken driver, Ghaly said.

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