The number of COVID-19-positive patients in Los Angeles County hospitals inched upward again today, reaching a level nearly six times higher than the number just one month ago.

Another 27 virus-related deaths were also reported Monday, lifting the county’s overall death toll from throughout the pandemic to 28,086. The county reported nearly 120 deaths over the weekend.

The county Department of Public Health confirmed another 31,576 new COVID infections, a number that is likely low due to delays in weekend reporting by testing labs.

According to state figures, there were 4,564 COVID-positive patients in hospitals across LA County as of Monday, up slightly from 4,507 on Sunday. The number of those patients in intensive care was 621, a slight reduction from 622 a day earlier.

One month ago, there were just 772 COVID-positive patients in county hospitals. The rapid rise has been attributed to the spread of the highly transmissible omicron variant of the virus.

With Monday being a holiday, the city of Long Beach has not reported local number since Friday. But as of Jan. 13, there were 332 COVID-positive patients in Long Beach-area hospitals—up from 49 a month earlier.

If there’s any positive sign that the current surge might soon ebb, it is in the average daily rate of people testing positive for the virus countywide. That percentage has been falling slightly in LA County over the past week, reaching 16.5% on Monday, down from 17.2% on Sunday. The rate was over 20% a week ago.

Long Beach’s positivity rate, however, was still elevated. It crept up to nearly 30% last week, and it remained there on Monday, according to the city’s COVID dashboard, although it’s unclear if that number is affected by reporting delays over the holiday.

In releasing COVID numbers Monday, county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer recognized the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, and the continuing disparity in virus infections and death among communities of color.

“As Reverend King memorably said, ‘Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health is the most shocking and the most inhuman because it often results in physical death,”’ Ferrer said in a statement. “Tragically, we have seen this play out in real life and very clearly over the past two years with the disparate impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on people of color. From the onset of the pandemic, communities of color have experienced the greatest devastation from COVID-19 in Los Angeles County and throughout the nation.”

Health officials have been raising concerns about the current surge in cases impacting a hospital system already strained by staffing shortages—which have been further exacerbated by COVID infections among health care professionals, preventing them from coming to work.

They continue to urge people to avoid going to an emergency room unless absolutely necessary.

Ferrer has also urged residents to avoid dangerous activities in the coming weeks, particularly those that are indoors and involve mingling with unvaccinated or higher-risk people. She also stressed that while the omicron variant is easily capable of infecting vaccinated people, vaccinations are still proving to be effective in preventing infected people from winding up hospitalized.

She called on residents to get vaccinated and obtain booster shots; wear upgraded masks such as N95, KN95 or KF94 varieties; and get tested, saying the county dramatically expanded testing availability after shortages two weeks ago that led to long lines at some test centers.

Breaking News Editor Jeremiah Dobruck contributed to this report.

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