Health & Fitness
LA Hit With Uptick As Coronavirus Claims Its 7,000th Angeleno
Health officials on Monday tied a dramatic uptick in new coronavirus cases with basketball, baseball, and football watch parties in LA.

LOS ANGELES, CA — The coronavirus has claimed 7,000 lives in Los Angeles and infected more than 300,000 people. The somber milestones come as the county sees a dramatic uptick in new cases. Health officials suspect the uptick is tied to small gatherings centered around the city's playoff runs in basketball and baseball as well as the start of the football season.
In a way, LA's postseason riches have been both a blessing and a curse. After months of lockdown, the city needed cause for celebration and the Lakers and Dodgers have delivered. But boisterous celebrations and gatherings continue to be dangerous in the era of coronavirus.
Barbara Ferrer said the county has seen a concerning increase in daily case reports, rising from an average of about 940 per day at the beginning of October to almost 1,200 per day over the past week. She minded residents and businesses that their decisions today will impact efforts to restart the economy in upcoming weeks.
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"This is a call to everyone -- individuals and businesses -- to understand the increases we're discussing today are the results of decisions we collectively made two to three weeks ago," Ferrer said. "And the actions we're taking today will influence whether we're able to continue our recovery journey, or we stall or even take steps backward. We do need to slow the transmission to allow for economic recovery."
According to Ferrer, the spike "is not steep as what we saw in July, but this is a cause for concern."
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One major cause for concern is the role that gatherings are playing in the spread of the coronavirus. As the weather turns cool and sports resume, people have been more lax about getting together indoors. Often with the friends and family, they feel safer removing their masks, and that is his how the virus is spreading in Los Angeles now, according to health officials.
"We have all seen the pictures of sports fans rooting for their teams where they're shouting in the middle of a large crowd, and almost no one is wearing a face covering. This is the perfect setting for transmitting the virus," Ferrer said.
Asked to expand on the issue, Ferrer said gatherings of sports fans could be "contributing the most" to the recent case increases.
The increases "do correspond with gatherings happening more frequently as people come together with non-household members to watch games," she said. "And it wasn't just the Lakers or the Clippers. It's not just basketball. We now have football games that are happening and of course we've had the Dodgers in post-season for quite a few weeks already.
"... I think it's really wonderful that we have both incredible teams with so much talent and also incredible spirit amongst people in L.A. County who root with their hearts and their souls for their teams to do well," she said. "The downside of this is during a pandemic some of the things we've done in the past just don't make sense. Gathering in large crowds to watch games indoors, people aren't wearing their face coverings, people are yelling a lot. That's just not sensible. Even gathering outdoors at dining areas and watching games with hundreds of people and celebrating by jumping up and down with no masks on, hugging perfect strangers, again with a lot of shouting and cheering. It's so easy to spread this virus."
Ferrer noted in recent weeks that younger residents are the primary drivers of new cases.
Ferrer's comments came on a day the county reported another eight coronavirus-related deaths, pushing the county's cumulative total since the start of the pandemic to 7,000.
The county also announced another 861 cases of COVID-19. Although the number reflected the typically low amounts reported early in the week due to testing lags from the weekend, it was enough to lift the county beyond the 300,000-case milestone, with the total reaching 300,614.
There were a total of 767 people hospitalized due to the virus as of Monday, down from 785 on Sunday.
On her theme of discouraging large gatherings, Ferrer also issued an early warning for people to celebrate Halloween safely on Saturday. She urged residents to modify their actions to the pandemic -- using Zoom gatherings, holding at-home scavenger hunts or taking advantage of drive-through Halloween displays. She again discouraged door-to-door trick-or-treating, although the tradition isn't being outright banned by the county's health order.
She stressed that Halloween parties or other large gatherings are prohibited under the order.
"This pandemic has forced so many to sacrifice so much this year, and we recognize the frustration and disappointment with the holiday restrictions," she said. "For now though, it's simply not safe to celebrate holidays the way we usually do. Being close to others who are not in our household carries with it a lot of risk for transmitting COVID-19 this year."
City News Service and Patch Staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report.
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