Los Angeles County reported its highest number of daily new COVID-19 cases since February today, while the number of people hospitalized neared the 1,000 mark, but the rate of people testing positive for the virus appears to be leveling off after a precipitous rise.

Long Beach, meanwhile, reported two additional deaths from COVID-19 on Thursday, bringing the city’s total to 953 since the pandemic began. The number of people hospitalized reached 61, the highest since mid-March.

The city reported 96 new cases Thursday, the first time in a week and a half that number was lower than 100. The seven-day positivity rate and daily cases per 100,000 residents saw minimal decreases and remain high at 7.8% and 23.9, respectively.

The countywide numbers suggest that perhaps the rate of new cases may be stabilizing, county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Thursday.

The county has been experiencing sharp rises in daily case numbers, hospitalizations and testing-positivity rate over the past several weeks, with the rises attributed to the highly infectious delta variant of the coronavirus.

While daily case numbers remain high and hospitalizations are expected to continue trending up as a result, Ferrer said the stabilization in the testing-positivity rate is a glimmer of hope.

But the 3,248 new cases reported by the county Thursday still raised eyebrows, marking the highest daily number since Feb. 13 and representing a 17% increase over last week. The new cases brought the county’s cumulative number since the start of the pandemic to 1,293,450.

According to state figures, there were 991 people hospitalized in the county with COVID, including 203 people in intensive care. Ferrer said that since hospitalizations traditionally rise in the weeks following an increase incases, the hospital figure is likely to continue going up “for some time.”

She noted, however, that a small percentage of the people listed as COVID hospital patients actually were admitted for reasons other than the coronavirus, which was only detected during routine admission screenings. She also said hospitalization numbers have been increasing at a much slower rate than case numbers, with infections jumping by 740% over the last month and hospitalizations only up 180%.

The difference is believed to be a sign of vaccine effectiveness, preventing people from becoming severely ill due to the virus.

The vast majority of people being hospitalized are unvaccinated. According to Ferrer, there were 3,167 people hospitalized due to COVID between May 1 and July 17, and 92% of them were either unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated. Only 8% were fully vaccinated.

“These trends do contribute to our certainty that vaccines are working as intended here in L.A. County,” Ferrer said. “Although vaccinated people are seeing a rise in new COVID diagnoses, they’re primarily experiencing their infections not as severe illness that brings them to the emergency room, but as bad colds. As the data shows, unvaccinated people simply cannot have the same level of confidence that an infection with this virus will lead to mild illness.”

County figures show that as of July 27, among 4.9 million fully vaccinated residents, there have been 10,656 who tested positive for the virus, for a rate of 0.22%. That rate marks a 63% increase from a week ago, but still remains statistically low.

Among the vaccinated people, only 410 were hospitalized, for a rate of 0.008%, and only 35 died, a rate of 0.0007%.

From Jan. 1 through June 30 of this year, 99.8% of the people who have died from COVID-19 were unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated, Ferrer said.

As of Thursday, 72.4% of adult Long Beach residents—and 69.3% of eligible residents 12 and older—have been vaccinated against the virus.

While the pace of vaccinations has slowed significantly in the county, Ferrer said the county has now seen two consecutive weeks of small increases in the number of people receiving a shot. Between July 19-25, about 70,000 doses were administered in the county, up about 7,500 from the previous week.

“We’re grateful for these signs of increased vaccination uptake,” she said.

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