San Diego County health officials reported 1,504 new COVID-19 cases and five additional deaths Thursday as rising hospitalization rates throughout the state prompted Gov. Gavin Newsom to issue a conditional stay-at-home order.
Thursday's data raise the county's totals to 86,142 cases and 1,040 deaths.
Newsom's order will be triggered when intensive care unit bed availability in a select region falls below 15%. Although no region met that criteria as of Thursday, Newsom said the Southern California region could meet it in a matter of days.
Unlike the state's four-tiered coronavirus monitoring system, which grades every county individually, the new stay-at-home order will apply more broadly to five "regions" in the state: Southern California, the Bay Area, the greater Sacramento area, Northern California and the San Joaquin Valley.
San Diego County has an ICU occupancy rate of 77%. Of 696 ICU beds ready for use, 534 are occupied — 212 by COVID-19 patients, or nearly 40%.
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The San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency reported that 753 coronavirus patients were hospitalized as of Thursday. That compares to 739 reported Wednesday, with 209 in the ICU.
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The number of people with COVID-19 in area hospitals has nearly tripled from one month ago — 273 were hospitalized on Nov. 2. The 739 is also double the previous peak in mid-July.
Of the 86,142 cases logged in the county since the start of the pandemic, 4,769 — or 5.5% — have required hospitalization and 1,052 patients — 1.2% — had to be admitted to an ICU.
The total number of people hospitalized for any reason in the county is 4,531 — fairly consistent with the past several months — but the percentage of COVID-19 patients in the region's hospitals rose from 6.5% a month ago to 16.6% on Thursday.
Thursday also marked the 23rd consecutive day more than 600 new cases have been reported and the 11th day of the last 14 more than 1,000 new cases were reported — including two days over the Thanksgiving weekend with more than 1,800 new infections.
A total of 26,611 tests were reported Thursday, with 6% returning positive, bringing the 14-day average to 6.2%.
A total of 12 community outbreaks were confirmed Thursday. Over the previous seven days, 89 community outbreaks were confirmed. A community outbreak is defined as three or more COVID-19 cases in a setting and in people of different households over the past 14 days.
On Wednesday, San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher offered a reminder statistics on COVID-19 are delayed due to the virus' incubation period.
"We expect this to get worse before it gets better," Fletcher said.