The number of COVID-19-positive patients in Los Angeles County hospitals fell below 2,600 today, moving closer to the level that will start the clock for lifting the county’s outdoor mask-wearing mandate for large events, schools and childcare centers.

According to state figures, there were 2,597 COVID-positive patients in local hospitals as of Wednesday, down from 2,702 on Tuesday. Of those patients, 528 were being treated in intensive care, a drop from 547 a day earlier.

The number of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 at Long Beach area hospitals also continued to decline, reaching 211 Wednesday, according to city health officials.

The city’s intensive care unit capacity remains high, with over 92% of beds occupied, according to the city’s coronavirus dashboard. Just under 29% of ICU patients are COVID positive.

Hospital figures have been steadily dropping, and if the trend continues, the number could fall below 2,500 in the next day or two. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer has said if the number stays below 2,500 for two consecutive weeks, the county will lift its mask mandate for outdoor “mega-events” and outdoors at schools and childcare centers.

The indoor masking mandate, however, will remain in place until much stricter criteria are met, despite the state of California lifting its indoor mask requirement for vaccinated people next week. According to Ferrer, the county’s mask rule will not be lifted until the county’s virus-transmission rate falls to the “moderate” level as defined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for two straight weeks, or until COVID vaccines have been available to children under 5 years old for eight weeks.

Long Beach health officials said Tuesday they are using the same benchmarks as the county.

Those guidelines mean indoor masking will remain a requirement until at least March, but more likely at least April.

Reaching the CDC’s “moderate” designation requires the county to have a cumulative, seven-day new case rate of less than 50 per 100,000 residents. According to the CDC’s website, the county’s rate was 768 per 100,000 as of Wednesday. That’s down from 1,098 per 100,000 residents on Monday.

Vaccines for children under age 5 could potentially be approved by the end of the month, Ferrer said.

The county is so far sticking to that criteria, despite criticism by county Supervisor Kathryn Barger this week that the criteria was too stringent, and “not even realistic.” She said the county should align with the state to lessen confusion among residents.

The county on Wednesday reported another 103 COVID-related deaths, raising the overall death toll to 29,609.

Another 5,100 new cases were also confirmed, giving the county a pandemic total of 2,740,700.

Long Beach health officials, meanwhile, reported five more coronavirus-related deaths Wednesday, bringing the total to 1,164 since the first death was reported less than two years ago. City officials also reported 339 new cases.

The county’s average daily rate of people testing positive for the virus was 5% as of Wednesday, a rate that has been holding steady each day this week.

The county Department of Public Health also reported continued drops in infection rates among students and staff at schools. For the week ending Feb. 4, the testing-positive rate fell to 2.6% for schools, down from 4.4% a week earlier.

Long Beach’s seven-day positivity rate also continued to fall—now at 13.7%, down from 14.7% Tuesday—but remains well above the county’s rate. The city’s daily cases per 100,000 also fell, reaching 77 on Wednesday.

“The decline in positive tests and test positivity suggests that schools continue to successfully implement recommended strategies that limit spread, such as screening and response testing, ensuring compliance with isolation and quarantine requirements, following recommended infection control guidelines, and as required by the state, wearing well-fitting masks,” Ferrer said in a statement Wednesday. “As always, we are grateful for the hard work of school superintendents, labor partners and staff, parents and students to implement these strategies that promote safety at schools and help us move closer to our post-surge phase and less transmission.”

Staff Writer Brandon Richardson contributed to this story.

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