A significant increase in COVID-19 cases has prompted San Diego County public health officials Thursday to renew their efforts to get county residents vaccinated from the virus.
In the past seven days, 3,465 COVID-19 cases were reported in San Diego County. That's 1,566 or 82% more cases than the previous seven-day period.
Hospitalizations due to COVID-19 are also trending up. The daily total rose above 100 on July 6 and has remained above that threshold since. Hospitalizations are likely to increase, a county spokesman said, since they typically do after increases in cases.
The rise in cases and hospitalizations is occurring primarily in San Diegans who are not vaccinated. These individuals are also being disproportionately impacted by the Alpha, Gamma and Delta COVID-19 variants of concern.
RELATED: The Lambda Variant: What You Should Know And Why Experts Say Not To Panic
"The best protection we have against COVID-19 is getting vaccinated," said Dr. Wilma Wooten, county public health officer. "The vaccines are extremely effective at preventing serious illness from COVID-19. If you have not gotten immunized, do it now."
There has also been a very slight increase in post-vaccination infections, meaning people got infected with COVID-19 even though they were fully vaccinated.
Wooten said that was expected and that breakthrough cases typically have mild symptoms.
"This does not mean the vaccine is not working. Quite the opposite, the vaccine is doing what it's supposed to do: keep most people from being hospitalized, or worse, dying," she said.
RELATED: Public Health Experts Call On CDC To Change Its Mask Guidance
As of Friday morning, there were 717 new COVID-19 cases reported for a new total of 289,367 in San Diego County.
A total of 521 COVID-19 cases were reported to the county in Wednesday's report.
One new death was reported between July 14 and July 20. The region's total is 3,787. A man in his 60s and with underlying medical conditions died June 12.
As of Thursday, San Diego County's case rate is 7.6 cases per 100,000 residents, and a total of 7,895 tests were reported to the county this week, and the percentage of new positive cases was 6.6%.
The 14-day rolling percentage of positive cases among tests is 5.1% as of Thursday. All these numbers mark a significant increase from even one month ago as the virus surges.
A total of 22 new community outbreaks were confirmed in the past week as of Thursday: 10 in restaurant/bar settings, four in business settings, two in day camp settings, one in a campground setting, one in a restaurant setting, one in a construction setting, one in a government setting, one in a retail setting and one in a faith-based setting.