Tag Archives: Solano County CA

Solano’s Dr. Matyas gives details on yesterday’s report of 6 COVID deaths, tier assignments and recent numbers

Solano awaits guidelines on post-Covid blueprint from state

Terry Warren of Vallejo receives her second shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at The Salvation Army Kroc Center in Suisun City, Monday, April 5, 2021. (Aaron Rosenblatt/Daily Republic)
Fairfield Daily Republic, by Todd R. Hansen, April 6, 2021

FAIRFIELD — Solano County health officials are expecting the state to soon release its plan for after its current Blueprint for a Safer Economy.

The post-Covid guidelines could go into effect in just a couple of months, Dr. Bela Matyas, the county public health officer, said in a phone interview Monday.

“They were sounding pretty reasonable for what they were saying at the time,” Matyas said about the guidelines.

However, the details of the plan, and its exact rollout date, have not been specified.

In the meantime, the county is not expecting any changes to its red-tier status.

That is both good news and bad, Matyas suggested. He said he was concerned the county could regress into the more restrictive purple tier, while other indicators suggested the orange tier was possible.

Dr. Bela Matyas

“The problem is it is pretty volatile. One day we are talking about going back into purple, and the next day we are talking about getting into the orange,” Matyas said. “That’s how volatile it’s been.”

The weekend numbers helped to settle that a bit.

The county reported 100 new cases since Friday’s update, an average of 33.33 cases per day through Monday – taking the overall total to 31,401.

The daily average is a significant improvement over the 51 new cases Thursday and 61 new cases Friday, with a seven-day average of 41.7.

There were six new Covid-related deaths reported, all men over 65 with underlying health issues, and all from the holiday surge.

Matyas said he believed five died in December, the other in January. Four were from the state prison, the other two were from the community.

It brings the pandemic death total in Solano County to 203.

Matyas also reported that the makeup of the recent increases in confirmed cases was as the Public Health Division suspected, largely younger people. That helped explain why hospital-related numbers were not seeing the same rise.

Matyas also noted that 68.8% of the county’s population over 65 have received their vaccinations, which he described as “encouraging” for the protection of the most vulnerable population in the county.

Overall, about 39% of the county’s population of 16 and older residents have been inoculated, Matyas said.

Monday’s number of individuals hospitalized with the disease was 15, part of the downward trend experienced despite the daily cases climbing during the same period.

The seven-day positivity testing rate did not improve over the weekend, holding at 6.5%. However, active cases dropped for the first time in more than a week, falling by 35 to 297.

“I was hoping it would be below 6,” Matyas said of the testing rate.

Vallejo added 39 new cases over the three days, bringing its total to 9,333. Fairfield added 20 for a new count of 8,559. Vacaville’s tally is at 8,206 after 23 new cases, the county reported.

Suisun City (2,146) added 10 cases; Dixon (1,805) added two; Benicia (898) added four; Rio Vista (353) added one; and there was one new case to take the total in the unincorporated area of the county to 101, the county reported.

The number of individuals who have been tested climbed by 832 since Friday and was reported at 192,973.

The state’s color-coded Covid-19 monitoring system designates the purple tier for counties where transmission of the novel coronavirus is considered to be widespread. Shutdown orders for counties in the purple tier are the most severe. The red tier – where Solano sits – is for counties with a substantial spread of the virus. The orange tier designates moderate virus transmission, while the yellow tier is reserved for counties where the spread of the virus is deemed to be minimal.

Restrictions to slow the spread of the virus are eased as counties move from purple to red, red to orange and orange to yellow. The state has previously reported that it is developing criteria for a new green tier with even fewer restrictions than the yellow tier.

COVID spread in Solano County: 100 new cases and 6 new deaths – STAY SAFE!


By Roger Straw, Monday, April 5, 2021

100 new COVID-19 cases over the weekend and 6 new deaths!  Ages 18-49 most likely to catch the virus.

Solano County reported 100 new COVID cases over the weekend, adding to 61 last Friday and 51 on Thursday.  Solano reported a total of 292 new cases last week, averaging 42 per day, edging us back toward the State’s purple tier.  The County also reported 6 new COVID-related deaths over the weekend!

Case rates by age group

Note that those of us age 18-49 are most likely to catch the virus.  The chart shows the rate of cases in Solano County (per 100,000 population, as of today).

>> The virus is still on the move here.  Stay safe, get vaccinated, wear a mask and social distance!

FOR THE RECORD: Screenshots from Solano County COVID Dashboard on Monday, April 5:COMPARE: Screenshots from Solano County COVID Dashboard on Friday, April 2:

The screenshots above are from today’s and last Friday’s Solano County COVID-19 Dashboard.  The Dashboard is full of much more information and updated weekdays around 4pm.  On the County’s dashboard, you can hover a mouse or click on an item for more information.  Note the tabs at top for SummaryDemographics and Vaccines.  Click here to go to today’s Solano County Dashboard.

Sources

Solano County cautions about COVID from religious observances and spring break

Press Release, Solano County Public Health, April 1, 2021

Solano Public Health urges public to remain vigilant, practice COVID-19 safety measures during religious observances and spring holidays amidst uptick in cases

April 1, 2021

SOLANO COUNTY – The Solano County Department of Health and Social Services, Public Health division, urges the public to practice COVID-19 safety measures to protect oneself, family, friends and others who are more likely to get very sick from COVID-19 while participating in religious observances and spring break holidays.

“The rising number of COVID-19 cases is concerning especially as we approach the holidays where the risk of spread can increase,” said Bela T. Matyas, M.D., M.P.H., Solano County Health Officer. “Being in the Red Tier does not mean we can let our guard down. Until a majority of our residents are vaccinated, we continue to urge everyone to take these precautions seriously – wear a mask in public, maintain physical distance as much as possible, avoid crowds and wash hands often – to protect our community members, prevent a surge of cases, and keep our County from reverting back to the Purple Tier.”

As religious observances such as Holy Week, Easter, Passover, Orthodox Easter, Ramadan and other spring holidays near, faith-based leaders, local organizations and the public are urged to plan and adhere to safety protocols, including keeping wearing a mask and maintaining 6-foot physical distancing between households. There are also many ways that religious practices can still be observed, including watching events online through social media platforms and celebrating safely at home.

UPCOMING VACCINE CLINICS
To date, about 35 percent of Solano County residents 18 and over have received at least one shot of the COVID-19 vaccine. Solano Public Health reminds residents who have not yet been vaccinated to sign up on the Solano County vaccine interest form by visiting www.solanocounty.com/covidvaccine, as well as the State’s MyTurn notification system at www.myturn.ca.gov, to receive notices about upcoming vaccine clinics. Notices are sent out to those who are eligible for the vaccine in Solano County.

COVID-19 INFORMATION
For the most recent local COVID-19 health information, visit the Solano County website at www.SolanoCounty.com/COVID19 and on Facebook at Facebook.com/SolanoCountyPH (@SolanoCountyPH).

I may be wrong, but it seems we’re getting mixed signals on Coronavirus…

By Roger Straw, April 3, 2021

…and maybe heading for another surge

Roger Straw, The Benicia Independent

Things aren’t looking so good for coronavirus trends here in Solano County.  But wait…  the State is easing restrictions?

Here on the Benicia Independent, I have documented coronavirus weekday reports in Solano County since April of last year.  I’m a layperson, untrained in public health, but I’ve paid attention to the COVID spikes and trends we have experienced in the Solano cities of Benicia, Vallejo, Fairfield, Suisun City, Vacaville, Rio Vista and Dixon.

Recently increasing numbers of positive cases here in Solano County (292 new cases last week) are nowhere near what they were this January, when we averaged 274 new cases per day.  But modest upturns in the numbers have caught my attention, and have begun to make news in major Bay Area media (see below).  Our typically overly optimistic Solano Public Health officer has even issued a warning.  What gained my attention yesterday was these two seemingly contrary headlines:

    • SFGATE: Solano County may get bumped back into the COVID purple tier  “Too early to call it a surge now but that doesn’t mean it’s not the beginning of a surge only time will tell,” Bela Matyas, the county’s health officer told KRON. “We are now starting to get uncomfortably close to the level of the disease reported each day that would put us back in purple.”
    • SF Chronicle: California planning to dump color-coded tier system  “California is preparing to retire its color-coded tiered reopening plan as vaccination rates improve and coronavirus cases continue to drop, state officials said Friday, as several Bay Area counties prepared to move into a less restrictive tier next week.  Details about a so-called green tier — which would presumably allow almost all activities to resume in counties with very low threat from the virus — will be “coming soon” as part of the state’s transition toward shutting down the tiered system entirely, said Dee Dee Myers, the state’s top economic adviser.”

There are news stories like these all over the map, from rosy re-opening stories to dire warnings of a fourth surge.  This morning’s Vallejo Times-Herald is FULL of coronavirus articles with contradictory messaging: we’re winning against the virus, we’re losing the battle.

Cause for concern…

I am seriously concerned that Solano County is headed for another surge.  And I think the State of California is not helping.  Easing of restrictions at this moment in our national and local crisis is wrong.

My home state of Michigan is seeing new cases soar in recent weeks, to more than 5,600 cases a day from about 1,000 on Feb. 21.  The Michigan Governor is setting up 37 new ‘popup’ COVID testing sites for Spring Break, doubling down on vaccine administration, and asking for masking and distancing, but it’s clearly too little, too late.

Will California go the route of Michigan?  I hope not, but I’m worried I’m wrong.   Will Solano County Public Health officials learn to ignore the deniers among us, including certain County Supervisors?  Maybe it will come down to City officials again, and Benicia’s new City Manager Erik Upson will need to take it into his own hands to declare a public emergency, as did his predecessor.