Omicron peaks in California, but BA.2 subtype raises questions

There is growing optimism that the overall Omicron surge has peaked in California, but progress across the state remains uneven.

The improvement is most pronounced in places like Los Angeles County and the San Francisco Bay Area, where health officials have voiced increased confidence in recent days that the coronavirus test positivity rate, as well as daily new coronavirus cases and hospitalizations, have either stabilized or begun to convincingly decline.

“This downward trend is encouraging, and it signals that we’re likely to have passed the peak of Omicron transmission and are beginning to see a real decline in the number of newly infected individuals,” LA County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said.

One potential wrinkle, though, is the emergence of a subtype of Omicron.

The World Health Organization has said the appearance of a subtype, called BA.2, is increasing in many countries. A pair of cases have also been found in Santa Clara County, Northern California’s most populous county.

“We don’t really know what that means yet. We’ll be learning that in the days and weeks to come,” said Dr. Sara Cody, the county’s health officer and public health director. “So far, we don’t really know how it behaves.”

dr Peter Chin-Hong, a UC San Francisco infectious diseases expert, said Wednesday that there’s nothing in the early data right now that makes him worried about BA.2.

“And the reason why I’m not worried is because I’m confident that, if you get boosted … you wouldn’t go to the hospital,” Chin-Hong said. “I’m not worried about it as being more deadly,” he said, based on early data out of Denmark, but added that he’s “keeping an open mind. You never know what’s going to happen. It has a few more mutations. But I’ll be shocked if it makes you sick.”

BA.2 will still be a risk for infecting people who haven’t been vaccinated and haven’t had prior exposure to Omicron. “I think our vaccines and our boosters will still work,” Chin-Hong said.

Cody said she thinks more coronavirus waves are yet to come, but it’s unclear what the next one will look like — whether it will be something little, or another huge mountain.

“The road ahead still has a lot of uncertainty. We don’t know what’s going to come next,” Cody said at a town hall Tuesday night. “The greatest challenge for all of us is that we can’t quite see around every corner.”

Even as case numbers improve, officials continue to urge caution.

Case numbers “are still extraordinarily high,” and “there continue to be a significant number of people in LA County with severe illness,” many of whom are unvaccinated, according to Ferrer.

“Omicron was an eye-opener, in part because people who had gotten infected with Delta seem to have almost no protection against Omicron,” Ferrer said Tuesday. “And I don’t think Omicron is our last variant.”

While it’s true that unvaccinated people who survive Omicron are going to have some natural immunity to the variant, there’s also evidence that doesn’t last that long, Ferrer said.

“We seem to have the science telling us we’re all getting the better protection, obviously, from our vaccines and our boosters,” she said.

Chin-Hong agreed that natural immunity hasn’t been enough to protect people from future re-infection. “Immunity from Delta doesn’t protect you from Omicron,” he said.

People who have survived a previous bout of coronavirus infection, but still decline to get vaccinated, will be at risk for future infection as natural immunity weakens. “They will continue to be at risk because they will run out of gas,” Chin-Hong said of their immunity.

California’s Omicron surge appears to have peaked in the week of Jan. 10-16, when the state was recording about 122,000 new coronavirus cases a day. That figure has since dropped to 96,000 cases a day, according to state data released Tuesday that reflects cases reported through Monday.

Still, the most recent rate remains roughly double the peak of last winter’s surge, which maxed out at 46,000 cases a day.

Statewide, the number of coronavirus-positive hospitalizations has also stabilized in recent days and is no longer increasing dramatically. On Jan. 19, LA County recorded 4,814 patients — about 60% of last winter’s peak of 8,098. As of Monday, that census had fallen to 4,554.

Omicron’s transmissibility has been so breathtaking in scope, it’s hard to grasp just how many more Californians have been simultaneously infected over the past month.

Since New Year’s Day, a staggering 2.4 million coronavirus cases have been reported in California. That’s almost approaching the entire sum of coronavirus cases reported statewide all of last year: 3.1 million.

Compared with their Omicron peaks, daily coronavirus case rates have dropped by 39% in LA County, 33% in Orange County, 25% in San Bernardino County and 21% in Ventura County, according to a Times analysis of state data released Tuesday.

Regionally, Southern California, the San Francisco Bay Area, and the Greater Sacramento area have also observed declines of 25% to 28%.

“We are past the peak,” said Cody, the Santa Clara County health officer. “And we’re just beginning to see early signs that that our hospitals may be seeing a little bit of a reprieve.”

“It’s been an extraordinarily difficult several weeks. But I think that spread is beginning to come down. That being said, it’s, of course, still quite high,” Cody said.

Yet the San Joaquin Valley and rural Northern California have yet to begin a persistent drop. In Southern California, San Diego and Riverside counties have also yet to observe the same.

The Omicron wave has exacted a deadly toll. In recent days, LA County has averaged as much as 61 COVID-19 deaths a day over a weekly period; a rate that exceeds all past surges except for last winter’s.

While much has been made of Omicron’s seemingly milder nature compared with other variants, Ferrer urged people to do all they can to avoid infection. That includes avoiding nonessential gatherings, especially in indoor settings where masks are not worn, such as restaurants and bars.

Doing so, she said, will help protect vaccinated people from breakthrough infections and vulnerable people — such as the elderly, those with underlying health conditions and children too young to be vaccinated — from illness.

“While we’re finally turning the corner in the surge, we do need to remain cautious in order to reduce transmission to a low enough level that imposes less risk for those most vulnerable,” Ferrer said. “The continued high rate of transmission creates a lot more risk.”

Challenges remain. While 3 million LA County residents have received booster shots, another 3 million eligible people haven’t yet. That’s a problem, because “we continue to see that the booster significantly reduces COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths, particularly with Omicron,” Ferrer said.

Unvaccinated people are twice as likely to get infected compared with people who’ve been vaccinated but not yet boosted, Ferrer said. But a booster provides more protection. Unvaccinated people are four times more likely to be infected compared with those who have received their booster shot.

Unvaccinated people are also six times more likely to be hospitalized compared with vaccinated-but-not-yet-boosted people, and 24 times more likely to be hospitalized than those who have gotten boosted, according to Ferrer.

Only a very small number of fully vaccinated people are dying of COVID-19, Ferrer said. Unvaccinated people are 15 times more likely to die of COVID-19 compared with fully vaccinated people.

Health officials are especially concerned about low vaccination rates among children ages 5 to 11. In LA County, just 30% of children in this age group have received at least one dose of vaccine. In the poorest neighborhoods, only 22% of these children have received at least one shot, while in wealthier areas the share is 44%.

There are also racial and ethnic disparities. In this age group, just 16% of Latino and 17% of Black children have received at least one dose of vaccine, compared with 37% of white, 45% of Native American and 53% of Asian American children.

LA County’s immunization rates are far behind those of San Francisco, where 71% of children ages 5 to 11 have received at least one dose of vaccine.

“Regrettably, this disparity can lead to higher rates of spread and illness in the very communities that have already been hardest hit by the pandemic,” Ferrer said.

The county has dispatched the vast majority of its hundreds of scheduled mobile vaccination events into communities with the fewest resources, Ferrer said.

Even though hospitals in LA County are no longer reporting sustained increases in coronavirus-positive hospitalizations, the facilities remain challenged.

“Hospitals are still under immense stress due to staffing shortages,” said LA County Health Services Director Dr. Christina Ghaly.

In the last couple of months, hundreds of licensed county nurses have been temporarily unable to work because of coronavirus-related isolation or quarantine periods.

That said, the county’s public hospital system has not had to declare a crisis and hasn’t used the option of sending asymptomatic, infected health workers with active coronavirus infections back into work, despite a state rule allowing hospitals to do so in critical situations. The county has been able to procure nursing help from the state and federal government, redeploying nurses in outpatient areas into the hospital, accelerating hiring and hiring temporary nurses.

“Even with these efforts, we have a shortage of nurses that are needed to open all of our available beds,” Ghaly said. There are about 200 inpatient beds closed due to staffing shortages across LA County’s four public hospitals, which have been forced to postpone a number of surgeries and procedures.

Hospitals are also continuing to face difficulties in transferring recovering patients elsewhere, such as facilities that take in mental health patients, Ghaly said.

One bit of bright news has been the lack of a significant increase in COVID-19 deaths in LA County’s nursing homes, despite a record jump in coronavirus cases at these facilities. Ferrer credited the low death rate to high vaccination rates among nursing home residents.

“Most residents who are infected are fully vaccinated and experiencing milder illness,” Ferrer said.

In Mission Hills, the latest wave swiftly began to hit staffers at Ararat Nursing Facility soon after Christmas, said its executive director Margarita Kechichian. At one point, about one-tenth of its workforce — roughly 30 employees — was absent, she said.

Now only two or three employees are out, Kechichian said. Several residents tested positive for the coronavirus during the surge, but “we were very fortunate and happy to see that everybody has already recovered,” and last week, all the residents tested negative, Kechichian said.

The Mission Hills facility has already broken down its COVID unit — a designated area for patients who tested positive — and hasn’t had to use it for over a week, she added.

Kechichian attributed the milder impact from this wave, in part, to the fact that all of their staff are vaccinated and the majority have gotten booster shots.

“It came on so almost,” the executive director said of the Omicron wave. “But it already is kind of fizzling out.”

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