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niman

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  1. USA/CA-CDC-STM-P025/2020 12/20 49M matched UK variant with 3 AAs deleted in Spike protein, 3 AAs deleted in NSP6 and Q27 stop codon in NS8. map update https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/1/edit?mid=1aQDSL2LwQFbuoCAg_nIOPK8D-LIJ5MYd&ll=32.553817713722374%2C-117.72417105076106&z=8
  2. USA/CA-CDC-STM-P019/2020 12/20 47M matched UK variant with 3 AAs deleted in Spike protein, 3 AAs deleted in NSP6 and Q27 stop codon in NS8. map update https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/1/edit?mid=1aQDSL2LwQFbuoCAg_nIOPK8D-LIJ5MYd&ll=32.553817713722374%2C-117.72417105076106&z=8
  3. USA/CA-CDC-STM-P017/2020 12/20 52M matched UK variant with 3 AAs deleted in Spike protein, 3 AAs deleted in NSP6 and Q27 stop codon in NS8. map update https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/1/edit?mid=1aQDSL2LwQFbuoCAg_nIOPK8D-LIJ5MYd&ll=32.553817713722374%2C-117.72417105076106&z=8
  4. CDC has released (at GISAID), 3 UK variant, B.1.1.7, sequences (USA/CA-CDC-STM-P017/2020, USA/CA-CDC-STM-P019/2020, USA/CA-CDC-STM-P025/2020 collected between Dec 20-21 from 3 males in San Diego Co
  5. USA/FL-CDC-STM-P012/2020 12/19 23M matched UK variant with 3 AAs deleted in Spike protein, 3 AAs deleted in NSP6 and Q27 stop codon in NS8. map update https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/1/edit?mid=1aQDSL2LwQFbuoCAg_nIOPK8D-LIJ5MYd&ll=27.093191834088874%2C-81.92636440154072&z=7
  6. CDC has released (at GISAID) a UK variant, B.1.1.7, sequence, USA/FL-CDC-STM-P012/2020, collected Dec 19 from a 23M in Martin County
  7. Jan 1 UK COVID Variants - Sau Paulo Spike dels present Traveler (Italy UK) contact PCR+ Second case = no travel or contact Independent intros https://recombinomics.co/thedrnimanshow/2021/010121_BrazilDetail.mp3
  8. The above sequence had incomplete regions in the spike gene, which included the positions encoding positions 69/70. These sequences do have the deletion and were detected as S drop outs (PCR test of Spike gene creates a false negative).
  9. DETAIL https://www.dropbox.com/s/y99g4uw6s7za01c/CADDE genomic report 31 Dec 2020.pdf?dl=0
  10. We report the first two cases caused by the SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.7 (also known as Variant of Concern 202012/01, VOC) lineage in Brazil. The findings come less than 36 hours upon sample collection. Samples were immediately analyzed using a portable DNA sequencer as part of genomic surveillance activities from the Brazil-UK CADDE project. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis confirm two separate introductions of the VOC lineage in Brazil, possibly from the UK. One case reported no travel outside of Brazil. Given the higher transmissibility of the VOC compared to non-VOC lineages, increased genomic surveillance is urgently needed to investigate the extent of VOC circulation in the country. https://www.caddecentre.org/?page_id=15
  11. https://twitter.com/CaddeProject/status/1344714122429145090/photo/1
  12. County Reports Record-High Deaths as More Local Cases of New COVID-19 Strain Are Confirmed Credit: Shutterstock By Katie Cadiao, County of San Diego Communications OfficeDec. 31, 2020 | 5:15 PM The County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency is reporting a record-high number of new COVID-19 deaths. The 62 deaths reported today well surpass the previous single-day record of 39 deaths reported on Dec. 22. Meanwhile, whole genome sequencing has detected three new cases of the United Kingdom variant of COVID-19, also known as B.1.1.7., beyond yesterday’s report. The three newly-confirmed variant cases reported today were initially identified by Helix during diagnostic testing, then confirmed by whole genome sequencing by Scripps Research. The new cases of the UK strain were found in men, two in their 40s and one in his 50s. Contact tracing shows two men did not travel outside of the county while the third case has yet to be fully interviewed. None of the men had any known interaction with each other or the other confirmed case. A household contact of the first local B.1.1.7. strain case reported yesterday has been hospitalized for COVID-19, with whole genome sequencing pending. The discovery of the additional cases leads County Health Officials to believe that the new strain of the virus is widespread in the community. The four individuals who have tested positive for the B.1.1.7. strain live in La Mesa, Mission Beach, Otay Mesa and the Carmel Mountain/Rancho Bernardo area. In light of the high case numbers and new strain being detected in the region, County health officials urge San Diegans to: Wash your hands Wear a mask Keep your distance from others and leave your household only for essential activities If you’re sick, get tested, and then stay home and isolate yourself ICU Capacity and Stay Home Order: The current intensive care unit (ICU) bed availability for the Southern California region is now 0.0% and will be updated by the state daily. The Regional Stay Home Order is in effect and prohibits gatherings of any size with people from other households and adds restrictions for multiple sectors. The order will last until the region’s ICU availability meets or exceeds 15%. Community Setting Outbreaks: 12 new community outbreaks were confirmed on Dec. 30: Three in healthcare settings, two in business settings, two in emergency services settings, two in faith-based agency settings, one in a food/beverage processing setting, one in a TK-12 school setting and one in a daycare/preschool/childcare setting. In the past seven days (Dec. 24 through Dec. 30), 59 community outbreaks were confirmed. The number of community outbreaks remains above the trigger of seven or more in seven days. A community setting outbreak is defined as three or more COVID-19 cases in a setting and in people of different households over the past 14 days. Testing: 28,183 tests were reported to the County on Dec. 30, and the percentage of new laboratory-confirmed cases was 11%. The 14-day rolling average percentage of positive cases is 11%. Target is less than 8.0%. The 7-day, daily average of tests is 21,379. People at higher risk for COVID-19 who are with or without symptoms should be tested. People with any symptoms should get tested. Healthcare and essential workers should also get a test, as well as people who have had close contact to a positive case or live in communities that are being highly impacted. Those recently returned from travel, or who participated in holiday gatherings, are also urged to get tested. Cases: 3,083 new cases were reported to the County on Dec. 30. The region’s total is now 155,595. 5,869 or 3.8% of all cases have required hospitalization. 1,216 or 0.8% of all cases and 20.7% of hospitalized cases had to be admitted to an intensive care unit. Deaths: 62 new COVID-19 deaths were reported to the County on Dec. 30. The region’s total is now 1,534. 26 women and 36 men died between Dec. 15 and Dec. 30, and their ages ranged from mid- 40s to early 100s. A total of 59 had underlying medical conditions, one did not have medical conditions and two have medical history pending. More Information: The more detailed data summaries found on the County’s coronavirus-sd.com website are updated around 5 p.m. daily. https://www.countynewscenter.com/county-reports-record-high-deaths-as-more-local-cases-of-new-covid-19-strain-are-confirmed/
  13. Interactive map of San Diego County COVID cases https://sdcounty.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/e09887e8e65d4fda847aa04c480dc73f
  14. By Los Angeles Times Staff Updated Dec. 31 9:50 p.m. Pacific 2,296,102 confirmed cases +34,113 on Thursday 25,984 deaths +573 on Thursday 335,983 vaccinated 1.1% of adults To better understand the COVID-19 pandemic, The Times is conducting an independent, continual survey of dozens of local health agencies across the state. What we know The holiday drove down new case counts. Many local health departments closed for Christmas. Tallies over the holiday weekend are not fully representative. Stay-at-home orders have returned. Most of the state, including Los Angeles County, is currently under stricter rules. New cases have been surging. Over the last seven days, the state has averaged 36,194 cases per day, a -4.1% increase from two weeks ago. Roughly 11.6% of tests this past week have come back positive. Deaths are on the rise. The state has averaged 290.1 daily deaths over the last week, an increase of 32% from two weeks ago. Hospitalizations have never been higher. Statewide, there are 20,625 people hospitalized with a confirmed case, 34% more than two weeks ago. Among those patients, 4,432 are in intensive care. Disparities in age and race persist. Roughly 74% of the dead were 65 or older. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 2.6 times more likely than whites to test positive. California counties +Other trackers +More coverage + Jump to a section Totals Hotspots Maps Hospitals Vaccine Tests Demographics Nursing homes Prisons State rankings The latest totals Coronavirus can infect people so rapidly that it has continued to spread despite shutdown orders aimed at slowing the growth of new cases and flattening the line below. The number of cases in California is now on pace to double every 36.1 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading. CasesDeaths Cumulative cases Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.0500,0001,000,0001,500,0002,000,000Stay-at-home orderStay-at-home orderGovernoreases limitsGovernoreases limits2,296,102Dec. 31 Times survey of county and local health departments Local governments announce new cases and deaths each day, though bottlenecks in bureaucracy can introduce delays. For instance, some agencies do not report new totals on holidays and weekends, leading to lower numbers on those days. Over the past week, the state has averaged 36,194 new cases and 290.1 new deaths per day. Experts say the true number of people infected is unknown and likely much higher than official tallies. New cases by day Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.010,00020,00030,00040,00050,00060,00070,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Deaths by day Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.02004006007-dayaverage7-dayaverage Seven-day averages offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. On the cases chart, gray bars mark when errors in a state computer system delayed the tabulation of new cases. Where new cases are concentrated State officials study the latest data and then rate regions and counties to determine when and how businesses reopen. The government doesn‘t release enough data to replicate its analysis, but the rate of new cases per 100,000 residents over the last seven days provides insight into where the virus is spreading. Metric CasesDeaths Method Per 100kTotals Regions ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents 1. Southern California 803.1 cases per 100k in last 7 days803.1 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 2. San Joaquin Valley 599.7599.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 3. Greater Sacramento 368.8368.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 4. Bay Area 367.3367.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 5. Northern California 332.4332.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 After adjusting for population, the virus is now categorized as widespread in 54 the state's 58 counties, which results in stricter rules being put into place. Together they are home to 99% of California residents. Metric CasesDeaths Method Per 100kTotals Counties ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents 1. Lassen 1,638.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days1,638.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 2. San Bernardino 9509507-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 3. Riverside 941.7941.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 4. Los Angeles 925.7925.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 5. Amador 861.8861.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 6. Monterey 766.6766.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 7. Madera 765.1765.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 8. San Benito 743.9743.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 9. Kern 739.5739.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 10. Ventura 726.1726.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 11. Tulare 656.1656.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 12. Colusa 638.3638.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 13. Merced 616.6616.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 14. San Joaquin 611.7611.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 15. Orange 596.5596.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 16. Kings 5815817-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 17. San Diego 564.4564.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 18. Imperial 542.7542.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 19. Tehama 512.8512.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 20. Santa Cruz 510.3510.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 21. Fresno 502.2502.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 22. Sutter 488.2488.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 23. Inyo 486.6486.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 24. Tuolumne 478.4478.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 25. Stanislaus 4734737-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 26. Napa 462.5462.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 27. Santa Clara 457.2457.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 28. Sierra 443.7443.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 29. Mono 430.4430.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 30. Solano 428.9428.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 31. Glenn 405.1405.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 32. Placer 392.8392.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 33. Santa Barbara 390.8390.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 34. Sacramento 362.6362.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 35. Yuba 357.6357.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 36. Butte 354.9354.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 37. Contra Costa 348.1348.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 38. Lake 3433437-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 39. Yolo 342.8342.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 40. Modoc 335.6335.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 41. El Dorado 334.3334.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 42. San Luis Obispo 3293297-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 43. San Mateo 306.6306.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 44. Alameda 304.6304.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 45. Shasta 275.3275.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 46. Alpine 261.3261.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 47. Sonoma 253.1253.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 48. Del Norte 2372377-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 49. Plumas 2302307-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 50. Siskiyou 229.7229.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 51. Mariposa 228.1228.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 52. Calaveras 218.9218.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 53. Mendocino 197.9197.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 54. Nevada 195.8195.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 55. San Francisco 194.1194.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 56. Marin 189.4189.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 57. Humboldt 165.7165.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 58. Trinity 85.585.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Jan. 1 Show less The Times' calculation of per capita rates can vary from what's published elsewhere. To learn more about how and why this count sometimes differs from official figures, consult our FAQ. What's open where? See how the governor has rated all 58 counties, and what that means for reopening, in our county reopening tracker. Mapping the toll The coronavirus has been found in all 58 counties, from urban Southern California to the state's rural north. Cumulative totals Metric CasesDeaths Method Per 100kTotals Confirmed cases1.3k3.1k4.3k5.8k7.2k10.7k15k Hover for more information. Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingReddingFresnoFresno Cumulative totals County Cases Per 100k Thursday Deaths Per 100k Thursday Lassen » 4,691 15,042.5 +76 10 32.1 +1 Imperial » 22,219 12,329.1 +91 420 233.1 +6 Kings » 16,114 10,737.3 +199 110 73.3 – San Bernardino » 194,377 9,102.5 +1,163 1,445 67.7 +3 Kern » 68,969 7,810.3 +653 512 58 +2 Los Angeles » 771,519 7,640.3 +14,679 10,359 102.6 +291 Riverside » 180,553 7,575.8 +16 1,985 83.3 +34 Tulare » 33,443 7,262.7 +318 406 88.2 +7 Merced » 19,444 7,226.2 +199 260 96.6 +8 Sutter » 6,505 6,785.1 +94 52 54.2 +2 Madera » 10,491 6,767.8 +218 117 75.5 – Fresno » 65,400 6,686.2 +251 646 66 – Amador » 2,515 6,648.3 +13 24 63.4 – Monterey » 27,859 6,430.8 +570 193 44.6 +3 Stanislaus » 34,465 6,390.7 +324 616 114.2 +8 Mono » 897 6,328.5 +2 4 28.2 – Colusa » 1,351 6,294.3 – 8 37.3 – San Joaquin » 45,583 6,225.4 +923 651 88.9 +23 San Benito » 3,673 6,181.8 +135 29 48.8 +1 Alpine » 67 5,836.2 – 0 0 – Tuolumne » 2,962 5,492.1 +41 21 38.9 – Tehama » 3,292 5,194.6 +39 36 56.8 – Glenn » 1,449 5,194.1 – 14 50.2 – Yuba » 3,898 5,163.4 +40 19 25.2 +1 Orange » 157,183 4,967.6 +610 1,875 59.3 +1 San Diego » 155,595 4,711 +3,083 1,534 46.4 +62 Ventura » 39,559 4,664.4 +1,582 263 31 +3 Shasta » 8,060 4,500.7 +353 78 43.6 +5 Solano » 19,211 4,380.8 +203 98 22.3 – Sacramento » 65,245 4,320.8 +840 857 56.8 +13 Napa » 5,741 4,085.2 +77 28 19.9 +1 Santa Barbara » 17,391 3,919.2 +383 160 36.1 +3 Yolo » 8,238 3,832 +141 111 51.6 +2 Sonoma » 18,992 3,788.4 +120 190 37.9 +6 Marin » 9,798 3,764.2 +70 139 53.4 – San Luis Obispo » 10,397 3,694 +219 82 29.1 – Santa Clara » 69,879 3,635.4 +2,456 709 36.9 +36 Placer » 13,755 3,619 +205 125 32.9 – Modoc » 323 3,613.8 +3 1 11.2 – Contra Costa » 40,697 3,591.2 +961 335 29.6 +4 Inyo » 635 3,511.2 +16 20 110.6 – Butte » 7,390 3,254.4 +121 96 42.3 – San Mateo » 24,589 3,210.3 +343 227 29.6 +10 Santa Cruz » 8,749 3,195.8 +342 83 30.3 – Alameda » 51,590 3,138.7 +1,394 657 40 +32 El Dorado » 5,719 3,063.8 +70 24 12.9 +2 Lake » 1,846 2,877.7 +27 24 37.4 +1 Mendocino » 2,487 2,844.8 – 26 29.7 – Del Norte » 760 2,771.3 +6 2 7.3 – Siskiyou » 1,176 2,701 +30 11 25.3 – San Francisco » 23,074 2,652 +298 186 21.4 +2 Nevada » 2,609 2,632.9 +44 50 50.5 – Plumas » 486 2,599.1 +12 4 21.4 – Trinity » 276 2,145.9 +4 4 31.1 – Calaveras » 853 1,885.7 – 22 48.6 – Sierra » 47 1,604.1 +5 0 0 – Mariposa » 252 1,436.7 +18 4 22.8 – Humboldt » 1,764 1,299.3 +33 22 16.2 – Show less Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 1,350 places as released by county health departments. Confirmed cases 100 1,000 10,000 Counties that do not report cases by locality © Mapbox © OpenStreetMap Improve this map The following counties currently do not report cases by locality: Alpine, Colusa, Glenn, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Tehama and Tuolumne Filter by countyAlameda Amador Butte Calaveras Contra Costa Del Norte El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Imperial Inyo Kern Kings Lake Lassen Los Angeles Madera Marin Mendocino Merced Mono Monterey Napa Nevada Orange Placer Plumas Riverside Sacramento San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Shasta Sierra Siskiyou Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Trinity Tulare Ventura Yolo Yuba Search by name Area Confirmed cases East Los Angeles 16,986 Pomona 16,389 Palmdale 15,259 Lancaster 13,721 North Hollywood 12,562 South Gate 11,988 Santa Clarita 11,849 Boyle Heights 11,535 Downey 11,532 El Monte 11,261 Glendale 11,193 Pacoima 11,004 Compton 10,688 Sylmar 9,975 Norwalk 9,940 Van Nuys 9,397 Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone 8,970 Lynwood 8,661 Panorama City 8,492 Baldwin Park 8,320 West Covina 8,149 90805: Long Beach 8,102 Inglewood 8,081 Huntington Park 7,442 Pico Rivera 7,368 Vernon Central 7,326 Whittier 7,164 Reseda 7,100 Pasadena 6,879 Montebello 6,762 Bellflower 6,747 West Vernon 6,479 Paramount 6,469 Florence-Firestone 6,246 Hawthorne 5,981 North Hills 5,799 Sun Valley 5,685 Canoga Park 5,618 South Whittier 5,502 Bell Gardens 5,490 Carson 5,372 Burbank 5,112 Central 5,055 Westlake 5,048 Wilmington 5,032 Melrose 4,995 90813: Long Beach 4,980 South Park 4,952 Watts 4,849 Vermont Vista 4,784 Harvard Park 4,544 Wholesale District 4,501 Pico-Union 4,479 Northridge 4,468 La Puente 4,442 Arleta 4,368 Bell 4,320 San Pedro 4,297 Lakewood 4,143 Covina 4,127 Winnetka 4,127 Alhambra 4,113 Azusa 4,077 El Sereno 4,001 Century Palms/Cove 3,966 Torrance 3,937 Athens-Westmont 3,891 Granada Hills 3,885 Willowbrook 3,884 Exposition Park 3,868 Gardena 3,737 90806: Long Beach 3,702 Highland Park 3,620 Maywood 3,495 Sherman Oaks 3,456 Hollywood 3,316 Lake Balboa 3,305 Lincoln Heights 3,291 Hacienda Heights 3,245 Temple-Beaudry 3,221 Koreatown 3,192 San Fernando 3,173 Wilshire Center 3,158 Cudahy 3,063 Glendora 2,989 Castaic 2,929 Harbor Gateway 2,909 Monterey Park 2,897 90810: Long Beach 2,873 West Whittier/Los Nietos 2,853 Rosemead 2,834 Woodland Hills 2,800 90804: Long Beach 2,757 Santa Monica 2,751 Mission Hills 2,707 La Mirada 2,675 West Adams 2,513 90802: Long Beach 2,460 Green Meadows 2,434 Downtown 2,401 Valley Glen 2,377 Valinda 2,359 San Jose Hills 2,298 Eagle Rock 2,280 University Park 2,279 South El Monte 2,243 Rowland Heights 2,200 Chatsworth 2,194 Hyde Park 2,162 Lennox 2,068 Encino 2,062 Lawndale 2,037 Glassell Park 2,034 Altadena 2,030 Tarzana 1,992 Silver Lake 1,976 East Hollywood 1,972 Monrovia 1,964 Walnut Park 1,925 Diamond Bar 1,912 San Gabriel 1,899 San Dimas 1,864 Vermont Knolls 1,846 Mt. Washington 1,801 West Hills 1,774 90815: Long Beach 1,766 Santa Fe Springs 1,748 Cerritos 1,719 La Verne 1,702 Bassett 1,693 90807: Long Beach 1,687 Baldwin Hills 1,678 Commerce 1,672 Beverly Hills 1,635 90808: Long Beach 1,607 Arcadia 1,600 Harvard Heights 1,584 Redondo Beach 1,560 Tujunga 1,558 Little Bangladesh 1,552 Unincorporated - Azusa 1,508 Lakeview Terrace 1,480 Temple City 1,477 Porter Ranch 1,462 Unincorporated - Covina 1,459 Palms 1,437 West Hollywood 1,431 Hawaiian Gardens 1,427 Claremont 1,419 West Los Angeles 1,416 Duarte 1,405 Harbor City 1,386 Westwood 1,356 Sunland 1,342 Westchester 1,318 Historic Filipinotown 1,317 Del Rey 1,268 Valley Village 1,258 Artesia 1,254 Culver City 1,248 West Carson 1,219 90803: Long Beach 1,178 West Puente Valley 1,127 Mar Vista 1,110 Walnut 1,054 Northeast San Gabriel 1,027 Cloverdale/Cochran 1,003 Venice 987 Lake Los Angeles 981 Alsace 975 Country Club Park 952 Covina (Charter Oak) 948 Leimert Park 938 Hollywood Hills 929 Vermont Square 917 Brentwood 903 Crenshaw District 903 Figueroa Park Square 882 Echo Park 841 South Pasadena 833 90814: Long Beach 827 Studio City 821 East Rancho Dominguez 801 Elysian Valley 793 Manhattan Beach 787 Atwater Village 781 Rancho Palos Verdes 772 Gramercy Place 770 Athens Village 750 Adams-Normandie 748 Jefferson Park 746 Little Armenia 746 Lomita 743 Mid-city 726 Avocado Heights 722 North Whittier 718 Quartz Hill 716 Calabasas 706 Signal Hill 688 Victoria Park 659 Los Feliz 646 Hancock Park 625 Stevenson Ranch 619 Carthay 607 Crestview 602 La Crescenta-Montrose 598 Hermosa Beach 580 Agoura Hills 579 Unincorporated - Duarte 577 South San Gabriel 567 Sun Village 559 Miracle Mile 550 Manchester Square 543 Beverlywood 521 Thai Town 499 Canyon Country 494 El Camino Village 466 Chinatown 464 Pacific Palisades 462 La Canada Flintridge 458 South Carthay 440 Cadillac-Corning 427 View Park/Windsor Hills 423 Beverly Crest 400 St Elmo Village 389 El Segundo 383 Reseda Ranch 381 Longwood 374 Park La Brea 360 Century City 357 Wellington Square 355 Unincorporated - Arcadia 335 Lafayette Square 332 Playa Vista 330 Wiseburn 319 East La Mirada 315 Elysian Park 314 Littlerock/Pearblossom 310 Littlerock 309 Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez 301 Toluca Lake 300 Santa Monica Mountains 299 Sierra Madre 297 East Whittier 286 Acton 268 Cheviot Hills 254 Little Tokyo 251 San Marino 244 Ladera Heights 238 Rancho Dominguez 238 Bel Air 232 Exposition 232 Shadow Hills 232 Unincorporated - South El Monte 226 Unincorporated - Monrovia 224 Palos Verdes Estates 223 Malibu 220 Desert View Highlands 219 Marina del Rey 215 Rancho Park 215 Unincorporated - Hawthorne 204 Unincorporated - Whittier 191 Del Aire 190 Val Verde 184 Angelino Heights 175 Irwindale 175 University Hills 158 Reynier Village 155 East Pasadena 154 La Rambla 144 Rolling Hills Estates 143 Regent Square 140 Sunrise Village 138 Unincorporated - West LA 138 Agua Dulce 135 View Heights 135 Kagel/Lopez Canyons 124 Faircrest Heights 123 Harbor Pines 107 Industry 103 Valencia 101 Anaverde 100 Del Sur 100 Pellissier Village 100 Unincorporated - La Verne 100 West Rancho Dominguez 99 Rosewood/East Gardena 98 Marina Peninsula 94 Santa Catalina Island 90 La Habra Heights 88 Saugus 88 Palisades Highlands 87 North Lancaster 86 Rosewood 85 Mandeville Canyon 78 Lake Manor 77 Westlake Village 76 Toluca Terrace 73 Leona Valley 70 Littlerock/Juniper Hills 69 Toluca Woods 69 White Fence Farms 67 Playa Del Rey 65 Vernon 64 Unincorporated - Palmdale 59 Newhall 56 Southeast Antelope Valley 54 Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain 53 Roosevelt 51 Unincorporated - Cerritos 45 Unincorporated - Glendora 45 Unincorporated - Pomona 43 Elizabeth Lake 41 Hidden Hills 39 Unincorporated - Claremont 35 Bradbury 32 Westhills 29 Hi Vista 26 Saugus/Canyon Country 26 Bouquet Canyon 25 Llano 24 Rolling Hills 24 San Pasqual 24 East Covina 22 Lake Hughes 22 Sycamore Square 22 West Antelope Valley 19 Westfield/Academy Hills 19 Palos Verdes Peninsula 18 Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest 17 Unincorporated - Del Rey 16 Unincorporated - El Monte 15 Brookside 14 Unincorporated - Bradbury 14 South Antelope Valley 13 Unincorporated - La Habra Heights 11 Sand Canyon 10 East Lancaster 9 Whittier Narrows 8 Avalon 6 Padua Hills 6 San Francisquito Canyon/Bouquet Canyon 6 Angeles National Forest 4 Pearblossom/Llano 2 Franklin Canyon 1 West Chatsworth 1 Show less Hospitals and patients Stay-at-home orders aim to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on available beds, officials watch out for rapid increases in the number of patients. There are now 20,625 hospital patients statewide with a confirmed case, a change of 34% from two weeks ago. ConfirmedSuspectedBoth Intensive care and other hospitalized patients AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.05,00010,00015,00020,000 California Department of Public Health Confirmed patients County ICU Other Total Los Angeles » 1,580 6,033 7,613 Orange » 495 1,633 2,128 San Bernardino » 339 1,368 1,707 San Diego » 393 1,106 1,499 Riverside » 296 1,168 1,464 Santa Clara » 156 539 695 Fresno » 118 484 602 Sacramento » 97 394 491 Alameda » 115 339 454 Kern » 78 298 376 Show all Officials also closely monitor the number of beds open in intensive-care units. The latest data show that there are 1,237 available statewide. Available ICU beds Aug.Sept.Oct.Nov.Dec.05001,0001,5002,0002,5003,0003,5001,237Dec. 30 California Department of Public Health Officials have organized the state’s counties into five regions. If a region’s available percentage of intensive-care beds falls below 15%, a stay-at-home order is issued. The number is adjusted to ensure that some beds remain open for patients who don’t have COVID-19. Four regions currently fail. Available ICU beds by region 01530Dec.3Dec.31Bay AreaBay Area8.5%8.5% Greater SacramentoGreater Sacramento14.4%14.4% Northern CaliforniaNorthern California34.1%34.1% San Joaquin ValleySan Joaquin Valley0.0%0.0% Southern CaliforniaSouthern California0.0%0.0% Vaccines California has received about 1.76 million doses of coronavirus vaccine. The first inoculations are being administered to healthcare workers who face the greatest exposure to the virus and residents of long-term care facilities, such as nursing homes. As of Dec. 31, 335,983 people have received the shot. Officials are still drafting a plan on how to roll out the vaccine beyond the initial group. It is unclear when essential workers and other Californians will have access. Phase 1 Healthcare workers and long-term care residents Doctors and nurses on the front lines are now receiving shots. Other healthcare workers and nursing homes come next in this step. Phase 2 Essential workers Emergency personnel, teachers and farmworkers are expected to be next in line. There is no start date. Who else will qualify is undecided. Phase 3 Everyone else It’s unclear how long the rest of California’s nearly 40 million residents may wait. Experts say shots may be readily available by late spring or summer. Testing After a fitful start, California has increased coronavirus testing in the state. Over the last week, an average of 297,962 tests have been conducted each day. New tests by day MayJulySept.Nov.0100,000200,000300,000400,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage California Department of Public Health In the last seven days, about 11.6% of the 2,085,733 tests conducted have returned a positive result. Positive test rate, seven-day average MayJulySept.Nov.0%5%10%15%11.6%Dec. 31 California Department of Public Health Wide disparities in age and race While younger adults make up the majority of positive tests, deaths due to the virus have skewed heavily toward the elderly. Percentage of cases vs. population 0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4 Percentage of deaths vs. population 0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4 There are 1518 cases with an unreported age. California Department of Public Health The state has logged the race of the patient in nearly two-thirds of cases. Latinos and Black people have contracted the virus at a higher rate than white and Asian people. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 2.6 times more likely to test positive than white people. Cumulative cases by race per 100,000 people JuneAug.Oct.Dec.01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,000AsianAsianBlackBlackLatino5,681 casesper 100,000Latino5,681 casesper 100,000OtherOtherWhiteWhite The other category includes Native Americans and people of two or more races. California Department of Public Health One outcome is that among most age groups, and especially younger people, Black people and Latinos are dying more often than other races relative to their share of the population. Percentage of deaths vs. population Age: All 18+ 0-17 18-34 35-49 50-64 65-79 80+ CasesDeaths 0%20%40%60%80%BlackAsianWhiteLatino Race Deaths Deaths Pct. Population Pct. Latino 11,572 47.4% 36.3% White 7,676 31.4% 38.8% Asian 2,946 12.0% 16.5% Black 1,696 6.9% 6.1% Note: There are 295 deaths with an unknown race in this age bracket, 1% of the total. Lives lost to COVID-19 Learn more about those we've lost by reading Times obituaries of Californians who have died from coronavirus. Nursing homes Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the outbreak. Residents and staff have accounted for 5% the state's coronavirus cases, but 35% of its deaths. CasesDeaths Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere JuneAug.Oct.Dec.05,00010,00015,00020,00025,000 California Department of Public Health Track outbreaks in California nursing homes Follow the data and look up the latest tallies at the hundreds of skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities across the state. State prisons The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has faced criticism around its handling of recent surge in cases across its 35 facilities in the state. Cumulative casesActive casesDeaths Cumulative cases AprilJuneAug.Oct.Dec.05,00010,00015,00020,00025,00030,00035,00040,00039,620Dec. 31 The data do not include tallies from federal prisons, immigration detention facilities or local jails. California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Track outbreaks in California state prisons Follow the data and look up latest outbreaks among inmates and state employees by facility. California in context To date, the United States has recorded 19,732,134 coronavirus cases and 342,246 deaths. In the last week, the country has averaged 181,229 new cases and 2,311 deaths per day. While California — America’s most populous state — has the nation’s top case counts, it ranks much lower after adjusting for population. Home to 12% of the country's population, thus far it has accounted for roughly 12% of cases. New cases in California vs. the rest of the country MarchMayJulySept.Nov.050,000100,000150,000200,000250,000 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Cases Per 100k Last 14 days Per 100k New cases FewerMore California 2,261,989 5,777.9 562,107 1,435.8 Mar 1Dec 30 Texas 1,750,250 6,276.6 215,800 773.9 Florida 1,306,123 6,341 150,788 732 New York 963,390 4,910.6 150,054 764.9 Pennsylvania 636,061 4,972.7 111,121 868.7 Ohio 690,748 5,933.3 105,982 910.4 Tennessee 580,809 8,732.5 96,524 1,451.3 Georgia 654,743 6,358.3 94,124 914 Illinois 955,380 7,451.4 84,780 661.2 Arizona 512,489 7,377.5 83,270 1,198.7 North Carolina 532,830 5,246.6 80,956 797.2 Indiana 505,017 7,608.6 64,167 966.7 Massachusetts 367,918 5,386.6 63,806 934.2 New Jersey 472,264 5,317.2 57,189 643.9 Virginia 344,345 4,092.6 52,105 619.3 Alabama 356,820 7,334.9 51,180 1,052.1 Michigan 528,621 5,308.8 45,806 460 South Carolina 303,475 6,123.5 43,356 874.8 Oklahoma 287,030 7,325.7 41,801 1,066.9 Wisconsin 516,226 8,933.7 38,064 658.7 Missouri 399,501 6,559.9 37,613 617.6 Louisiana 311,229 6,673.6 35,684 765.2 Kentucky 265,261 5,974.1 34,569 778.5 Colorado 330,859 5,981.7 34,143 617.3 Maryland 273,689 4,558.9 31,922 531.7 Utah 271,940 8,929.7 31,225 1,025.3 Arkansas 222,430 7,437.5 30,926 1,034.1 Nevada 222,595 7,615.7 28,497 975 Washington 242,330 3,322.2 28,065 384.8 Kansas 225,434 7,750.1 27,772 954.8 Mississippi 213,055 7,128.5 27,412 917.2 Minnesota 413,107 7,473.9 26,695 483 Connecticut 183,663 5,128.1 25,882 722.7 Iowa 280,064 8,940.6 19,290 615.8 West Virginia 84,225 4,604.8 17,376 950 New Mexico 141,186 6,747.5 16,829 804.3 Oregon 112,260 2,750.2 14,638 358.6 Idaho 139,864 8,286.7 14,412 853.9 Nebraska 165,297 8,678.1 13,194 692.7 Puerto Rico 75,888 2,240.6 12,202 360.3 Rhode Island 87,949 8,323.7 11,740 1,111.1 New Hampshire 43,242 3,218.3 9,809 730 Delaware 56,596 5,960.6 8,667 912.8 Montana 81,300 7,804.3 6,656 638.9 Maine 23,499 1,763.1 6,188 464.3 South Dakota 98,720 11,422.1 6,117 707.7 Alaska 46,483 6,294.1 4,010 543 Wyoming 44,133 7,585.1 3,823 657.1 North Dakota 92,203 12,257.8 3,517 467.6 District of Columbia 28,758 4,201.3 3,156 461.1 Hawaii 21,570 1,516.8 1,639 115.3 Vermont 7,276 1,164.2 1,267 202.7 Show less The same is true for deaths. So far, California has accounted for 8% of deaths nationwide. It still trails far behind New York, where deaths surged in the early days of the pandemic. New deaths in California vs. the rest of the country MarchMayJulySept.Nov.01,0002,0003,0004,000 Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey State Deaths Per 100k Last 14 days Per 100k New deaths FewerMore California 25,411 64.9 3,523 9 Mar 1Dec 30 Texas 27,600 99 2,680 9.6 Pennsylvania 15,665 122.5 2,556 20 Illinois 17,811 138.9 2,034 15.9 New York 37,840 192.9 1,899 9.7 Michigan 13,018 130.7 1,430 14.4 Florida 21,546 104.6 1,342 6.5 Arizona 8,718 125.5 1,188 17.1 Tennessee 6,810 102.4 1,142 17.2 Ohio 8,855 76.1 1,078 9.3 Indiana 8,160 122.9 1,059 16 New Jersey 18,952 213.4 949 10.7 Massachusetts 12,338 180.6 825 12.1 Missouri 5,664 93 764 12.5 North Carolina 6,729 66.3 750 7.4 Wisconsin 5,192 89.9 699 12.1 Minnesota 5,321 96.3 687 12.4 Georgia 10,846 105.3 618 6 Colorado 4,750 85.9 594 10.7 Maryland 5,848 97.4 578 9.6 Alabama 4,774 98.1 576 11.8 Arkansas 3,637 121.6 563 18.8 Louisiana 7,448 159.7 515 11 Kansas 2,736 94.1 489 16.8 Virginia 4,984 59.2 476 5.7 Iowa 3,822 122 472 15.1 Connecticut 5,964 166.5 458 12.8 Mississippi 4,747 158.8 453 15.2 South Carolina 5,249 105.9 449 9.1 Nevada 3,063 104.8 412 14.1 New Mexico 2,436 116.4 387 18.5 Washington 3,420 46.9 378 5.2 Kentucky 2,623 59.1 361 8.1 Oklahoma 2,453 62.6 325 8.3 West Virginia 1,318 72.1 279 15.3 Oregon 1,468 36 206 5 Rhode Island 1,777 168.2 187 17.7 Idaho 1,403 83.1 172 10.2 Puerto Rico 1,484 43.8 172 5.1 South Dakota 1,464 169.4 164 19 Nebraska 1,611 84.6 163 8.6 Utah 1,256 41.2 160 5.3 New Hampshire 741 55.1 116 8.6 Montana 950 91.2 114 10.9 Delaware 921 97 88 9.3 North Dakota 1,282 170.4 87 11.6 Wyoming 405 69.6 77 13.2 Maine 334 25.1 67 5 District of Columbia 780 114 60 8.8 Vermont 134 21.4 29 4.6 Alaska 203 27.5 22 3 Hawaii 285 20 7 0.5 Show less Tracking the coronavirus California counties Alameda Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Contra Costa Del Norte El Dorado Fresno Glenn Humboldt Imperial Inyo Kern Kings Lake Lassen Los Angeles Madera Marin Mariposa Mendocino Merced Modoc Mono Monterey Napa Nevada Orange Placer Plumas Riverside Sacramento San Benito San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Shasta Sierra Siskiyou Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tehama Trinity Tulare Tuolumne Ventura Yolo Yuba Other trackers Housing homeless people Nursing homes State prisons Following the curve Unemployment and economic fallout Which counties are open Which beaches are closed Lives lost Frequently asked questions More coverage Coronavirus symptoms How coronavirus spreads Get our newsletter About the numbers This page was created by Swetha Kannan, Casey Miller, Sean Greene, Lorena Iñiguez Elebee, Rong-Gong Lin II, Ryan Murphy, Melody Gutierrez, Priya Krishnakumar, Sandhya Kambhampati, Maloy Moore, Jennifer Lu, Aida Ylanan, Vanessa Martínez, Ryan Menezes, Thomas Suh Lauder, Andrea Roberson, Ben Poston, Nicole Santa Cruz, Iris Lee, Rahul Mukherjee, Jaclyn Cosgrove, Anthony Pesce, Paul Duginski and Phi Do. State and county totals come from an ongoing Times survey of California’s 58 county health agencies as well as the three run by cities. Those figures are ahead of the totals periodically released by the state’s Department of Public Health. State officials acknowledge that their tallies lag behind the updates posted by local agencies throughout the day and do not dispute The Times’ method. Data on hospitalizations, tests, demographics and reopening plans come from the state health department. Nursing home totals include skilled-nursing facilities tracked by the state public health department, as well as assisted-living facilities monitored by the California Department of Social Services. Data from other states, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico are collected by researchers at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering. Counties are organized into regions using the groupings developed by the state health department. The Times database is available to the public on Github, a popular website for hosting data and computer code. The files will be updated daily at github.com/datadesk/california-coronavirus-data. The data collection effort is done in partnership with journalists at the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Diego Union-Tribune, KQED, KPCC, CapRadio, Calmatters and Stanford’s Big Local News. Learn more about The Times count by reading this list of frequently asked questions or by reading this interview with members of our team. If you see information here that you believe is incorrect or out of date, please contact Data and Graphics Editor Ben Welsh at [email protected]. Change log Dec. 23 State prison data added to county pages and overview page. ICU totals at local hospitals added to county pages. Dec. 14 New charts were added ranking the rate of new cases in the state’s five regions over the last seven days. Dec. 12 New charts were added plotting the ICU capacity in the state’s five region over time. Dec. 3 The state’s new ICU availability metric were added to county reopening profiles. Nov. 13 A chart tracking changes in tier assignments was added to the reopenings tracker. Nov. 9 Per-capita totals for city-level data added to some county pages. Oct. 19 Maps were added for case counts in Del Norte, Lake, Siskiyou, Trinity counties. Oct. 17 The hotspots section now offers a ranking of counties by the total number of cases and deaths in the past week. Oct. 9 Charts plotting the daily trend in cities and regions added to most county pages. Oct. 4 Charts plotting how each area stacks up against the state’s reopening benchmarks added to county pages. Oct. 1 City-level totals added for Shasta County. Sept. 27 Totals for skilled-nursing facilities are now drawn from the state's open data portal, which is promoted as the most comprehensive and up-to-date source. Sept. 26 The hotspots section now offers a ranking of counties by deaths per 100,000 residents over the last seven days. Sept. 22 Nursing home lists moved to a new page focused on skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities. Sept. 13 The logarithmic curves plotting the rate of growth in each state were replaced. Instead, stacked-bar charts compare California's case and death counts against the rest of the nation. Sept. 12 The county map is now exclusively focused on cumulative totals and starts off by displaying grand totals per 100,000 residents. Sept. 11 The logarithmic curves plotting the rate of growth in each county were replaced. Instead, after adjusting for population, counties are now ranked by the number new cases announced in the past week. The reopening map has been removed and can be found by visiting our more complete county reopening tracker. https://www.latimes.com/projects/california-coronavirus-cases-tracking-outbreak/
  15. Jan 1 UK COVID Variants - San Diego Helix contract - Dec 20-22 collections PCR S Dropout review Geographically dispersed https://recombinomics.co/thedrnimanshow/2021/010121SD_Detail.mp3
  16. Jan 1 UK Variants - San Diego Co 3 more unrelated non-travelers males in 40's & 50's wife of index symptomatic La Mesa, Otay Mesa, Mission Beach and the Rancho Bernardo-Carmel Mountain area. https://recombinomics.co/thedrnimanshow/2021/010121SD_Explosion.mp3
  17. Three more UK strain cases confirmed By PAUL SISSON DEC. 31, 2020 6:05 PM Facebook Twitter Show more sharing options A waning 2020 delivered a final kick on the way out Thursday with the county health department announcing 62 additional COVID-19 deaths, a new single-day record arriving on New Year’s Eve. And there was an extra reason for concern. The county public health lab, working with local researchers, confirmed three more cases of the United Kingdom coronavirus strain Thursday, bringing the total to four, including the initial case involving a man in his 30s announced Wednesday. Officials said none of the four are related and had no contact with each other before testing positive. The three additional cases confirmed Thursday were all men. Case investigators have interviewed two of the three who reported no recent travel outside the country. Two of the three new cases were in their 40s and the third was in his 50s. The third case for whom travel information was not available had not yet been interviewed. They live in La Mesa, Otay Mesa, Mission Beach and the Rancho Bernardo-Carmel Mountain area. The county public health lab was still awaiting the results of genetic testing to confirm whether a close contact of Wednesday’s first UK strain subject, who was said to have been experiencing symptoms of coronavirus infection, also has the UK strain. Dr. Eric McDonald, medical director of the county’s epidemiology department, said Thursday evening that the subject, a woman also in her 30s who is the spouse of Wednesday’s UK case, has been admitted to a hospital after testing positive for coronavirus. Genetic testing being performed by Scripps Research will be necessary to confirm that the UK strain was involved, but that seems very likely at this point. “I would be shocked if it doesn’t come back with whole-genome sequencing that confirms it,” McDonald said. He said the three additional UK cases confirmed through genetic testing Thursday were actually tested between Dec. 20 and Dec. 22. Helix, a local company that the county contracts with for testing, looked through its records after the first case appeared and discovered the results as having the telltale “s drop” signature that marked Wednesday’s case. Having cases from different parts of the county that did not know each other, he said, shows that this strain, which is thought to spread more easily than other variants, has been among us for some time. “This didn’t just spread to that many different parts of the county among people who don’t know each other in the past two weeks,” McDonald said. “The dispersal of these cases geographically tells you that it has probably been in the county for a longer period of time.” With 99 deaths announced in just the past two days, December is by far the deadliest month of the pandemic. According to county records, 488 deaths have been recorded in December, more than twice the previous monthly record of 197 tallied in July. The most recent deaths announced Thursday range in age from 45 to 100 with three in their 40s. As is always the case, the deaths announced on any given day did not all occur the day before the announcement. It can take days or weeks for death certificates and causes of death to be finalized before they are reported to the public. Taking the latest group into account, records show that a total of 28 deaths occurred on Dec. 22, tying Dec. 18 for the deadliest day of the pandemic. McDonald said he reviews each and every death certificate before the county releases new numbers. Seeing so many in December, he said, has been particularly harrowing. “Every one of those is a person and has a family,” McDonald said. “What this means is that there are more and more San Diego families that are coming to grips with the fact that this is a real and deadly pandemic.” Deaths are what epidemiologists call a “lagging indicator,” generally occurring weeks or months after infections take hold. As such, a spike in deaths does not, in and of itself, say all that much about how a pathogen such as the novel coronavirus is spreading in a community. The number of new positive cases coming in daily provides a more immediate sense of the current pace of infection. The final COVID-19 report of 2020 lists 3,083 new cases, once again jumping over the 3,000 mark after three straight days below that mark. The result could signal the arrival of a new wave of cases connected to Christmas celebrations, given that the average incubation period for the virus — the amount of time spent in the body before symptoms generally begin to appear — is about 6 days, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Pressure continues to mount on local hospitals with 1,580 total COVID-19 patients in beds across the county Wednesday. COVID-positive patients occupied 35 percent of the 4,504 total beds in use. Intensive care admissions held steady at 621 with 386 having a COVID-19 diagnosis and 235 without.
  18. The three additional cases confirmed Thursday were all men. Case investigators have interviewed two of the three who reported no recent travel outside the country. Two of the three new cases were in their 40s and the third was in his 50s. The third case for whom travel information was not available had not yet been interviewed. https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/health/story/2020-12-31/san-diego-county-ends-2020-with-largest-single-day-covid-19-death-total-of-the-year
  19. There are 422,768 confirmed COVID-19 patients in Missouri, including 6,065 deaths https://www.kshb.com/news/coronavirus/covid-19-case-tracker-where-we-stand-in-mo-ks-nationwide Adair County 1,764 11 Andrew County 1,646 16 Atchison County 260 5 Audrain County 1,794 36 Barry County 2,396 44 Barton County 764 8 Bates County 834 12 Benton County 1,189 16 Bollinger County 1,076 13 Boone County 13,835 58 Buchanan County 6,213 132 Butler County 3,566 32 Caldwell County 545 5 Callaway County 3,778 30 Camden County 3,143 63 Cape Girardeau County 6,533 109 Carroll County 650 18 Carter County 373 6 Cass County 5,627 54 Cedar County 516 8 Chariton County 332 3 Christian County 5,599 49 Clark County 371 4 Clay County 7,108 98 Clinton County 1,248 60 Cole County 7,605 90 Cooper County 1,493 20 Crawford County 1,706 19 Dade County 368 9 Dallas County 697 18 Daviess County 468 9 DeKalb County 780 19 Dent County 701 8 Douglas County 617 19 Dunklin County 2,670 18 Franklin County 6,918 113 Gasconade County 675 29 Gentry County 604 16 Greene County 21,467 297 Grundy County 679 23 Harrison County 633 10 Henry County 1,432 22 Hickory County 425 9 Holt County 433 15 Howard County 617 2 Howell County 2,313 37 Iron County 408 1 Jackson County 23,425 243 Jasper County 11,566 190 Jefferson County 16,795 134 Johnson County 3,658 30 Knox County 150 1 Laclede County 2,491 46 Lafayette County 2,058 40 Lawrence County 2,293 52 Lewis County 539 3 Lincoln County 3,536 37 Linn County 417 11 Livingston County 1,036 23 McDonald County 2,013 27 Macon County 916 10 Madison County 1,200 10 Maries County 463 6 Marion County 2,329 24 Mercer County 131 1 Miller County 2,024 41 Mississippi County 1,420 26 Moniteau County 1,677 19 Monroe County 516 5 Montgomery County 498 9 Morgan County 1,444 24 New Madrid County 1,826 31 Newton County 4,105 66 Nodaway County 2,339 19 Oregon County 532 3 Osage County 1,188 8 Ozark County 378 4 Pemiscot County 1,471 30 Perry County 1,926 26 Pettis County 4,186 61 Phelps County 2,480 85 Pike County 1,275 14 Platte County 2,453 26 Polk County 1,792 21 Pulaski County 5,025 34 Putnam County 199 1 Ralls County 660 7 Randolph County 1,599 17 Ray County 1,115 8 Reynolds County 223 2 Ripley County 673 8 St. Charles County 29,669 330 St. Clair County 458 5 Ste. Genevieve County 1,520 8 St. Francois County 6,539 69 St. Louis County 69,480 1,391 Saline County 2,195 44 Schuyler County 199 1 Scotland County 227 3 Scott County 3,450 63 Shannon County 408 9 Shelby County 293 4 Stoddard County 2,681 60 Stone County 1,612 24 Sullivan County 656 10 Taney County 3,752 52 Texas County 1,339 17 Vernon County 1,082 19 Warren County 2,021 19 Washington County 1,780 39 Wayne County 663 6 Webster County 2,423 38 Worth County 119 1 Wright County 1,068 23 St. Louis city 16,186 302 Kansas City 30,039 352 Note: Positive cases and deaths reported by the Joplin Health Department are included with the Jasper County Health Department figures.
  20. https://covid19tracker.health.ny.gov/views/NYS-COVID19-Tracker/NYSDOHCOVID-19Tracker-Map?%3Aembed=yes&%3Atoolbar=no&%3Atabs=n
  21. Dec 31 Florida UK Variant COVID Case Martin Co - 20'sM sans travel Seqs released 2 for San Paulo Brazil Contacts of CO and CA indexes are symp or pos https://recombinomics.co/thedrnimanshow/2020/12/123120FL_Brazil.mp3
  22. First Case o MARTIN COUNTY, Fla. — The Florida Department of Health announced Thursday night that the first case of the U.K. COVID-19 variant virus has been found in Florida. The infected individual was identified in Martin County as a male in his 20s with no history of travel. The Florida DOH is working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to investigate the incident. The U.K. variant of the COVID-19 virus has emerged with a large number of mutations and seems to spread more easily and quickly than other variants, the CDC said on its website. "This variant was first detected in September 2020 and is now highly prevalent in London and southeast England," information on the CDC's website said. "It has since been detected in numerous countries around the world, including the United States and Canada." Experts in Florida said they do not expect the U.K. variant of the virus to have a significant impact, if any, on the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine. This story will be updated as more information becomes available. MARTIN COUNTY, Fla. — The Florida Department of Health announced Thursday night that the first case of the U.K. COVID-19 variant virus has been found in Florida. The infected individual was identified in Martin County as a male in his 20s with no history of travel. The Florida DOH is working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to investigate the incident. The U.K. variant of the COVID-19 virus has emerged with a large number of mutations and seems to spread more easily and quickly than other variants, the CDC said on its website. "This variant was first detected in September 2020 and is now highly prevalent in London and southeast England," information on the CDC's website said. "It has since been detected in numerous countries around the world, including the United States and Canada." Experts in Florida said they do not expect the U.K. variant of the virus to have a significant impact, if any, on the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine. This story will be updated as more information becomes available.
  23. The Florida Department of Health announced Thursday night that the first case of the U.K. COVID-19 variant virus has been found in Florida. The infected individual was identified in Martin County as a male in his 20s with no history of travel. https://www.mynews13.com/fl/orlando/news/2021/01/01/first-case-of-uk-covid-19-variant-identified-in-florida?cid=id-app15_m-share_s-web_cmp-app_launch_august2020_c-producer_posts_po-organic
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