Orange County Reports 191 New COVID-19 Cases, 13 Deaths

Orange County Reports 191 New COVID-19 Cases, 13 Deaths
Health care workers administer a drive-thru COVID-19 test at a new testing super site at the Orange County Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa, Calif., on Aug. 26, 2020. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
City News Service
2/28/2021
Updated:
2/28/2021

SANTA ANA, Calif.—Orange County reported 191 new cases of COVID-19 and 13 additional deaths on Feb. 28, although officials said those numbers might be low for the next few days due to technical issues with the state reporting database.

The county totals stand at 246,455 cases and 3,917 fatalities since the pandemic began.

Hospitalizations due to the coronavirus continued to decline, dropping to 421 from 444 on Feb. 27, with the number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care units increasing slightly to 132 from 128.

The county has 29.8 percent of its intensive care unit (ICU) beds available and 62 percent of its ventilators, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency.

The county’s test positivity rate—which is reported weekly—improved to 5.4 percent as of Feb. 23 from 7.8 percent the previous week, and the adjusted case rate per 100,000 on a seven-day average with a seven-day lag improved to 11.9 from 20.7.

The Health Equity Quartile Positivity Rate, which reflects the rates in lower-income and minority neighborhood hot spots, improved to 7 percent from 10.7 percent.

The OCHCA reported 8,075 tests Feb. 28 for a total of 3,043,410. There have been 230,971 documented recoveries.

On Feb. 24, the positivity rate dropped to 5.1 percent, the Health Equity rate to 6.6 percent, and the case rate per 100,000 to 10.4, according to Orange County Chief Executive Frank Kim.

Orange County officials think the county might reach all of the metrics required to exit the most-restrictive purple tier of the state’s reopening framework this week. To move up to a less-restrictive tier, a county must stay within those metrics for at least two weeks.

To get to the red tier, the county has to have a case rate per 100,000 population of 4 to 7, a positivity rate of 5 percent to 8 percent, and a Health Equity Quartile rate of 5.3 percent to 8 percent. The metrics are updated every Tuesday.

The red tier allows for many more businesses and organizations to reopen. For instance, retail stores could allow for half capacity instead of 25 percent, and museums, zoos, and aquariums could reopen for indoor activities at 25 percent capacity. Also, movie theaters, gyms, and restaurants could open indoors at 25 percent capacity.

On Feb. 26, the county was able to allow full-contact youth sports, including football.

Meanwhile, Reps. Lou Correa (D-Santa Ana) and Young Kim (R-Placentia) have asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency to bring a large COVID-19 vaccination site to Anaheim, which came as welcome news to Orange County officials as they have been able to provide more inoculations with delayed doses arriving this week.

“I would welcome any help we can get,” Orange County Supervisor Doug Chaffee said. “We could really ramp (the inoculations) up.”

Kim said he hadn’t seen the letter yet, but added, “I do support the federal government providing access to mass vaccination centers in Orange County. We know they have set up two in L.A. County, and one in the Bay Area in Alameda County and one in Central Valley, so when you look at Orange County being the third-most populous in California, we think that it’s a very dense county with 3.2 million people in 800 square miles, so because of that density, the communities in Santa Ana, Anaheim, and northern Orange County has been disproportionately impacted, and having access to a regional site here would be a wonderful benefit to our community.”

Orange County and Anaheim officials have set up mass vaccination sites at Disneyland and the Anaheim Convention Center.

Chaffee said the county has been addressing hot spots in northern Orange County with mobile vaccination sites.

On Feb. 27, a mobile site was set to open in La Habra, Chaffee said.

“We’re doing our best to get to these hot spots,” he said.

A FEMA site would mean more doses for the county, Kim said.

Orange County’s coronavirus vaccine site at Disneyland reopened on Feb. 26, a day after it shut due to brisk Santa Ana winds that threatened to uproot its tents. The theme park site was closed again on Feb. 28 due to high winds, but the appointments will be redirected to the Anaheim Convention Center, Kim said.

The only site that remains closed is the one at Santa Ana College, which will be able to reopen sometime in the middle of next week, Kim said.

Orange County received 83,055 doses of coronavirus vaccines on Feb. 25, helping officials catch up on canceled appointments due to a shortfall in medicine owing to winter storms to the east.

“We’re basically playing catch-up now,” Supervisor Lisa Bartlett said Feb. 25. “But we are on an extremely good trajectory at this point. Our numbers are looking good. ... We may be one of the first counties to go from purple to red tier.”

Some of the 83,055 doses will go to stand-alone hospitals and the Orange County Board of Education to vaccinate educators. The county government’s allocation amounts to about 20 percent and a portion from that goes to stand-alone hospitals and CalOptima, the county’s insurance program for the needy. The rest of the vaccines go to larger health care system providers.

Andrew Noymer, a University of California–Irvine professor of population health and disease prevention, said vaccine distribution has improved in recent weeks. He said he preferred that pharmacies would have taken the lead in getting shots in arms, but added, “ultimately you need both” government-run sites and private health care points of distribution.

Overall, the decreases in cases and the ramping up of inoculations has the country heading closer to getting past the pandemic, Noymer said.

“The news has never been better in a long time,” Noymer said.