Public Health Reports 61 New Deaths and 1,956 New Cases of Confirmed COVID-19 in Los Angeles County

Data Shows Signs of Closing the Gap in Inequitable Health Outcomes

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health (Public Health) has confirmed 61 new deaths and 1,956 new cases of COVID-19.  The number of new cases reported today include a backlog of 100 test results received from the State and a few hundred cases from a lab that delayed reporting yesterday.

Backlog cases from the state electronic lab report (ELR) are still anticipated. Data sources that track other key indicators, including hospitalizations and deaths, are not affected by this reporting issue.

To date, Public Health has identified 225,827 positive cases of COVID-19 across all areas of L.A. County, and a total of 5,392 deaths.

Data continues to expose disproportionality in health outcomes by race, ethnicity and income. However, Public Health sees signs of progress in closing the gaps.

Latino residents are dying at rates far higher than other group and were at 6 deaths per 100,000 people at the peak of transmission in July. This was 6 times higher than the rate for White residents at 1.3 deaths per 100,000 people.  Now the death rate among Latino residents is 2.4 deaths per 100,000 people. While decreasing, this is still 2.5 times higher than White residents.

Black residents had a rate at 4 deaths per 100,000 people during the peak of transmission in July which was 3 times higher than White residents.  Now, the mortality rate for Black residents is 1.7 deaths per 100,000 people, only slightly higher than that of White residents.

At its peak, on June 10, the mortality rate for people living in communities with the fewest resources was 7 deaths per 100,000 people. This is 7 times higher than that of people who were living in communities with the most resources, who had a death rate of 1 death per 100,000 people.  On August 9, the death rate among people who live in areas with the fewest resources was 4.6 deaths per 100,000 people. This is 4 times that of the death rate of people who were living in the highest-resourced communities who continue to have a mortality rate at 1 per 100,000 people. This is a decrease from 7 times to 4 times. It’s still an extraordinary gap and stands for a lot of disproportionately and the devastation among the Latino/Latinx community, but some of our efforts may be starting to show our ability to narrow the gap.

Public Health has increased the number of investigations for non-compliance of the Health Officer Order from 2,877 investigations in March to 9,683 investigations in July.  To date, there have been investigations at almost 30,000 workplaces. In the month of April, 30 businesses were closed for violations of the Health Officer Order.  This number has decreased to 23 businesses closed for the month of July.  Even as more inspections occurred in July than in April, there were less closures because most businesses have come into compliance with Health Officer Order directives. Public Health is hopeful more businesses will continue to come into compliance.

Of the 61 new deaths, 26 people that passed away (excluding Long Beach and Pasadena) were over the age of 80 years old, 20 people who died were between the ages of 65 and 79 years old, six people who died were between the ages of 50 and 64 years old, and three  people who died were between the ages of 30 and 49 years old, and one person who died was between the ages of 18 and 39 years old. Thirty-eight people had underlying health conditions including 17 people over the age of 80 years old, 14 people between the ages of 65 and 79 years old, four people between the ages of 50 and 64 years old, and three people between the ages of 30 and 49 years old.  Five deaths were reported by the City of Long Beach.

Ninety-two percent of the people who died from COVID-19 had underlying health conditions. Of those who died, information about race and ethnicity is available for 5,072 people (99 percent of the cases reported by Public Health); 50% of deaths occurred among Latino/Latinx residents, 24% among White residents, 15% among Asian residents, 10% among African American/Black residents, less than 1% among Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander residents and 1% among residents identifying with other races.  Upon further investigation, 160 cases and four deaths reported earlier were not L.A. County residents.

Testing results are available for more than 2,121,000 individuals with 10% of all people testing positive. The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services expanded testing capacity to serve communities hardest hit by COVID-19 that experience racial and economic disparities. Currently, people living in under-resourced areas have the highest rate of testing at almost 20,000 tests per 100,000 people.

There are 1,378 confirmed cases currently hospitalized and 32% of these people are confirmed cases in the ICU.

“We are thinking of all of the people across our communities who are grieving a loved one who has passed away from COVID-19.  We are so sorry for your loss,” said Barbara Ferrer, PhD, MPH, MEd, Director of Public Health. “COVID-19 has shined a stark light on systemic racism and inequity’s impact on health. By working together, we are starting to close the gaps for COVID-19 health outcomes.  We must continue to implement solutions and take actions that reduce the devastating impact of this pandemic by ensuring that resources are targeted to the hardest hit communities.”

Businesses play a very important role in slowing the spread because their actions and policies have an enormous impact on their workers. Improving efforts to protect the health of workers by making workplaces as safe as possible helps reduce disproportionality because workplaces can fuel inequities.

Health Officer Orders require business owners to implement strategies that protect workers and customers. They must also report COVID-19 outbreaks to Public Health in a timely fashion. Health Officer Orders require businesses with three or more known cases of COVID-19 within the workplace over the span of 14 days, to report the outbreak to Public Health. Employers who have one known case within the workplace must have a protocol that requires that person to self-isolate at home and anyone exposed to self-quarantine.

Residents are encouraged to report non-compliance and dangerous conditions at any businesses, including businesses not regulated by Public Health.  Residents can call 888-700-9995. These tips can be submitted anonymously.

Given past ELR delays, the department urges any person with a positive lab result to call 1-833-540-0473 to connect with a public health specialist who can provide information about services and support. Residents who do not have COVID-19 should continue to call 211 for resources or more information.

The Reopening Protocols, COVID-19 Surveillance Interactive Dashboard, Roadmap to Recovery, Recovery Dashboard, and additional things you can do to protect yourself, your family and your community are on the Public Health website, www.publichealth.lacounty.gov.

Please see additional information below:

 

Total Cases

Laboratory Confirmed Cases

225827

— Los Angeles County (excl. LB and Pas)*

213784

— Long Beach

9795

— Pasadena

2248

Deaths

5392

— Los Angeles County (excl. LB and Pas)

5086

— Long Beach

195

— Pasadena

111

Age Group (Los Angeles County Cases Only-excl LB and Pas)

– 0 to 4

3388

– 5 to 11

7438

– 12 to 17

9311

– 18 to 29

52811

– 30 to 49

73739

– 50 to 64

41484

– 65 to 79

16457

–  over 80

7841

–  Under Investigation

1315

Gender (Los Angeles County Cases Only-excl LB and Pas)

–  Female

106934

–  Male

103541

–  Other

92

–  Under Investigation

3217

Race/Ethnicity (Los Angeles County Cases Only-excl LB and Pas)

–  American Indian/Alaska Native

187

–  Asian

6766

–  Black

6185

–  Hispanic/Latino

76615

–  Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander

666

–  White

16213

–  Other

26341

–  Under Investigation

80811

Hospitalization (Los Angeles County Cases Only-excl LB and Pas)

–  Hospitalized (Ever)

15250

Deaths Race/Ethnicity (Los Angeles County Cases Only-excl LB and Pas)

–  American Indian/Alaska Native

10

–  Asian

762

–  Black

512

–  Hispanic/Latino

2535

–  Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander

16

–  White

1204

–  Other

33

–  Under Investigation

14

CITY / COMMUNITY**

Cases

Case Rate

City of Agoura Hills

133

637

City of Alhambra

1070

1234

City of Arcadia

416

720

City of Artesia

279

1661

City of Avalon

5

129

City of Azusa

1288

2574

City of Baldwin Park

2454

3197

City of Bell

1365

3757

City of Bell Gardens

1671

3880

City of Bellflower

2046

2632

City of Beverly Hills

581

1683

City of Bradbury

13

1216

City of Burbank

1205

1124

City of Calabasas

224

921

City of Carson

1551

1653

City of Cerritos

491

981

City of Claremont

319

874

City of Commerce*

494

3780

City of Compton

3446

3449

City of Covina

1170

2386

City of Cudahy

967

3972

City of Culver City

356

893

City of Diamond Bar

474

824

City of Downey

3507

3069

City of Duarte

432

1962

City of El Monte

3814

3252

City of El Segundo

112

667

City of Gardena

1038

1693

City of Glendale

2823

1367

City of Glendora

1100

2085

City of Hawaiian Gardens

454

3093

City of Hawthorne

1684

1897

City of Hermosa Beach

179

910

City of Hidden Hills

7

370

City of Huntington Park

2467

4147

City of Industry

29

6636

City of Inglewood

2476

2180

City of Irwindale

60

4112

City of La Canada Flintridge

147

710

City of La Habra Heights

32

587

City of La Mirada

736

1484

City of La Puente

1285

3157

City of La Verne

381

1145

City of Lakewood

1064

1324

City of Lancaster*

2651

1641

City of Lawndale

549

1633

City of Lomita

212

1023

City of Lynwood*

2807

3896

City of Malibu

91

702

City of Manhattan Beach

298

828

City of Maywood

1227

4374

City of Monrovia

636

1639

City of Montebello

1939

3012

City of Monterey Park

809

1299

City of Norwalk

2827

2627

City of Palmdale

3318

2087

City of Palos Verdes Estates

78

577

City of Paramount

2100

3748

City of Pico Rivera

2065

3212

City of Pomona

4681

3002

City of Rancho Palos Verdes

250

585

City of Redondo Beach

494

719

City of Rolling Hills

5

258

City of Rolling Hills Estates

34

419

City of Rosemead

709

1281

City of San Dimas*

441

1278

City of San Fernando

750

3047

City of San Gabriel

520

1270

City of San Marino

66

497

City of Santa Clarita

2716

1232

City of Santa Fe Springs

460

2505

City of Santa Monica

717

776

City of Sierra Madre

63

573

City of Signal Hill

224

1899

City of South El Monte

690

3304

City of South Gate

3856

3928

City of South Pasadena

238

914

City of Temple City

458

1256

City of Torrance

1217

815

City of Vernon

9

4306

City of Walnut

234

766

City of West Covina

2462

2275

City of West Hollywood

474

1283

City of Westlake Village

24

287

City of Whittier

1890

2162

Los Angeles