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19-Year-Old Latest COVID-19 Death As County Reports 2,000-Plus Lives Lost

The Moderna COVID-19 vaccine sits next to a syringe in a doctor's office at the Vista Community Clinic, Jan. 8, 2021.
Jacob Aere
The Moderna COVID-19 vaccine sits next to a syringe in a doctor's office at the Vista Community Clinic, Jan. 8, 2021.

San Diego County public health officials reported 2,595 new COVID-19 infections and 53 virus-related fatalities Thursday, as the county's death toll officially crossed the 2,000 mark.

The deaths reported include a 19-year-old male, the youngest San Diegan to die from complications of COVID-19.

Thursday's cases marked the 45th consecutive day with more than 1,000 new diagnoses. More than 3,000 daily infections have reported 17 times, while the 4,000 case mark has been crossed three times.

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The county's cumulative case total rose to 204,175, and the numbers of deaths to 2,005.

Of the 42,878 tests reported Thursday, 6% returned positive, dropping the 14-day rolling average from 14.2% on Wednesday to 13.6%. The county and its health partners have administered more than 3 million tests since the pandemic began.

What's driving coronavirus surge? Check out the KPBS Trigger Tracker

COVID-19-related hospitalizations edged down from a record 1,804 on Wednesday to 1,781, with 423 patients in intensive care units, just three shy of Monday's record 426. A total of 34 staffed ICU beds remain in the county — including both adult and pediatric beds. Only 251 ICU beds are occupied by patients without COVID-19.

Total hospitalizations from all causes increased from 4,659 on Wednesday to 4,806. That number is five above the 80% threshold of occupied beds — beyond which the county is reserving exclusively for COVID-19 patients.

The county has reported a 56% increase in the number of COVID-19 related hospitalizations in the past 30 days and a 42% increase in ICU admittance during that same time frame.

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Eight community outbreaks were reported Thursday, bringing the total reported in the past week to 48, tied to 210 cases.

RELATED: UC San Diego Starting To Vaccinate Seniors, Other Health Systems Are Waiting

The state of California Wednesday authorized immediate access to COVID- 19 vaccines for all residents aged 65 and older, following new guidance from the federal government, but county Supervisor Nathan Fletcher asked San Diegans to temper their expectations for the time being.

There are more than 620,000 people in the county counted in the Tier 1A vaccine distribution cohort. With the 65+ group, health officials are looking at another 500,000, for well over a million people eligible for vaccines. Both vaccines on the market are not effective without two doses.

Fletcher emphasized that for the time being, health care workers would still be prioritized until more vaccine supplies become available.

The county in early February plans to open three more "Vaccination Super Stations" like the one in Downtown San Diego adjacent to Petco Park. Fletcher said the county's Health & Human Services Agency is working with health partners to expand smaller distribution sites from four to 12.

By the end of June, the HHSA hopes to have 70% of the county's population over the age of 16 — or 1,882,554 people — vaccinated. Currently it has .04% immunized from COVID-19 and is administering 6,153 vaccines a day.

Between late November and now, the number of COVID-19 deaths in San Diego County doubled from 1,000 to more than 2,000. Experts expect the number to continue to rise rapidly for at least another month, if not two. Meanwhile, Covid-19 vaccines have arrived in Imperial County, but not enough -- and decisions on who to vaccinate are difficult. Plus, local workforce experts are hoping for a rebounding economy in 2021.