At the end of that article, I called for the City to consider and adopt a vaccination mandate for all City staff who come into contact with the public, most especially our firefighters who interact intimately at aerosol-sharing levels when responding to 911 calls.
That call is all the more important considering a Vallejo Times-Herald news report from summer of 2020. On July 2, 2020, the Times-Herald published “Benicia firefighter tests positive for coronavirus“.
The unnamed firefighter told the city on Wednesday that they have the coronavirus, as city officials work with the Solano County Public Health Department to determine the source of the infection, according to a city of Benicia news release.
An almost identical press statement was released by the City of Benicia two months later, on September 10, 2020. It is unclear whether this is referring belatedly to the same firefighter, or a second firefighter.
The Benicia Fire Department has had over a year living with the reality of COVID among staff. Surely the Department is well-informed as to the possibility of re-infection and the high danger of transmission by asymptomatic carriers of the delta strain of the virus.
I am personally acquainted with the incredible heroic up-close measures of these public servants in times of 911 crisis. I want them safe, and I want those they help to be safe from them.
>> If it is not already doing so, I call upon the Fire Department to at minimum test its unvaccinated staff daily, and to rigorously quarantine any who test positive.
>> If it is not already doing so, Fire Department leadership should strongly encourage all staff to get vaccinated.
>> And I call upon our City Council to act quickly to require all City staff who deal directly with the public to be vaccinated, especially those who deal with Benicia residents in emergencies.
DEATHS: no new deaths today. Total Solano deaths over the course of the pandemic now at 290. Solano Health Officer Dr. Bela Matyas recently noted a surprising 24% of deaths during the recent Solano surge were vaccinated individuals. It seems a clear signal for those of us who have been vaccinated to continue to wear masks and steer clear of close aerosol contact with unknown others. Total deaths by age and race/ethnicity:
CASES: The County reported 142 new COVID cases since Wednesday, 71 per day.
COMMUNITY TRANSMISSION RATE: Over the last 7 days, Solano has seen 556 new cases, 2.5 TIMES the CDC’s population-based definition of a SUBSTANTIAL rate of transmission and 1.2 TIMES the CDC’s definition of a HIGH rate of transmission.
(CDC FORMULA: Based on Solano County population of 449,432, the CDC would rate us in “SUBSTANTIAL” transmission with 225 cases over the last 7 days. Double that, or 450 cases in the last 7 days would rank us in “HIGH” transmission. Reference: CDC’s “Level of SARS-CoV-2 Community Transmission”.]
ACTIVE CASES: Solano’s 646 ACTIVE cases is down slightly from Wednesday’s 649, and still far above our summer rates.
POSITIVE TEST RATE: Our 7-day average percent positivity rate was 7.5% today, down a bit from 8.2% on Wednesday. COMPARE: today’s California rate is 2.3%.Today’s U.S. rate is 7.9%. [Source: Johns Hopkins]
HOSPITALIZATIONS:
CURRENT hospitalizations were down today from 74 to 64 persons, but still in the range we saw during the winter surge.
ICU Bed Availability is up some today, from 18% to 21%, and still low in the yellow danger zone. Again, we are in the worrisome range we saw during the winter surge.
Ventilator Availability remained at only 48%, somewhere in the range of last February’s winter surge.
TOTAL hospitalizations Solano County’s TOTAL hospitalized over the course of the pandemic must be independently discovered in the County’s occasional update of hospitalizations by Age Group and by Race/Ethnicity. The County updated its Hospitalizations charts today, adding 11 previously unreported hospitalizations. See below. The race/ethnicity numbers indicate a number of persons whose race/ethnicity was not given or recorded. All percentages remain unchanged.
FACE MASKS… Required for all in Benicia and Vallejo
GOOD NEWS! Benicia City Council passed a citywide indoors mask mandate that went into effect on August 24 and includes everyone 4 years old and up when indoors in public places, even those of us who are vaccinated. Benicia was joined by Vallejo on August 31. In the Bay Area, Solano County REMAINS the only holdout against a mask mandate for public indoors spaces.
THE SOLANO COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS failed to even consider an agendized proposal for a countywide MASK MANDATE last week. On Tuesday, September 14, the Board’s agenda called for discussion of an indoors mask mandate for all and a vaccination mandate for county workers. The Board voted 4-1 to require county-run facilities in Vallejo and Benicia to abide by local mandates. But the Board voted down the vaccination mandate 3-2, and failed to even consider the county-wide mask mandate. The Solano Board of Supervisors now joins with Dr. Bela Matyas in officially showing poor leadership on the COVID-19 pandemic.
Cases by City on Friday, September 24:
Beniciaadded 4 new cases today, a total of 1,412 cases since the outbreak began. Benicia has seen 24 new cases over the last 7 days, dropping just below the CDC’s definition of HIGH community transmission (defined as 28 cases, based on Benicia population), but still in the high range for SUBSTANTIAL community transmission (defined as 14 cases, based on Benicia population).[Note that Solano County is also rated far above high transmission, and Solano’s 6 other cities are likely also individually experiencing high or substantial transmission.]
Dixon added 5 new cases today, total of 2,447 cases.
Fairfield added 39 new cases today, total of 11,815 cases.
Rio Vista added 2 new cases today, total of 561 cases.
Suisun Cityadded 14 new cases today, total of 3,115 cases.
Vacaville added 31 new cases today, a total of 11,573 cases.
Vallejoadded 47 new cases today, a total of 12,875 cases.
Unincorporatedadded 0 new cases today, a total of 137 cases (population figures not available).
Only 62% of Benicia firefighters have been vaccinated
The Benicia Fire Department reported on September 23, 2021 that only 23 of its 37-member staff are vaccinated.
The City of Benicia provided a Public Records email with this information in response to a request submitted by Benician Gregg Horton.
Horton wrote on September 10, “Please provide record sufficient to determine the number of Benicia Firefighters who are vaccinated for COVID-19. Please also provide any records tracking the vaccination rate of Benicia Firefighters over time.”
The City’s formal response began with three paragraphs detailing it’s legal obligation and desire to cooperate fully under California’s Public Records Act (Government Code section 6250 et seq.).
The City’s response then very briefly offered the following: “In response to your request, the Fire Dept. provided the following information: – Currently, 23 of 37, or 62%, of Fire Dept. staff are vaccinated.”
I am concerned, maybe a little alarmed, that unvaccinated first responder firefighters may be in close aerosol contact with residents in times of emergency. I am personally acquainted with and highly appreciative of the quick response our firefighters provide in a resident’s home or in public places when a 911 call goes out.
The City of Benicia ought to quickly agendize and take action to mandate that city workers who come into contact with the public are vaccinated and/or tested routinely.
Cal Matters, by Hannah Getahun, September 22, 2021
IN SUMMARY…
California’s COVID-19 deaths are skewing younger, with the average age dropping seven years in September. And death rates are increasing for most racial groups, particularly Latinos. A by-the-numbers look at California’s COVID-19 deaths.
It’s been longer than a year and a half since COVID-19 first arrived in California, and the demographics of who is dying from the virus are changing.
So far, 67,628 people have died in California during the pandemic, more than in any other state. In recent months, those who are dying are younger on average. And, unsurprisingly, people of color are still among the most devastated by COVID-19, with the highest death rates among Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders and Black people.
Here’s a by-the-numbers look at COVID-19 deaths in California.
How much younger are they?
Since the beginning of the pandemic, the average age for Californians who died from COVID-19 is 73. But in April through September the average age dropped to 67, and in August and September, it dropped to 66, according to a California Department of Public Health analysis of state data.
“We are observing that it’s not the older populations that were first dominating a number of fatalities in the pandemic,” said Fresno County Interim Health Officer Dr. Rais Vohra. “It’s now skewing younger and younger in terms of who gets hospitalized and — unfortunately — who goes on to have a very tragic outcome of a fatality.”
A major reason? Older people are vaccinated at higher rates than younger residents. About 67% of Californians 18 to 49 are fully vaccinated, compared to 73% for people 65 and older.
Hospitalizations and infections are on the rise for Californians under 18. But old age — and the underlying conditions that come with it — will still be an important factor in death rates, said Dr. George Rutherford, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco.
What’s the racial breakdown? Has it changed?
Latinos are dying at a lower rate than white and Black people in California, according to the state’s data. However, Latinos have had the sharpest increase in the death rate in the last month, rising from 2.4 deaths per 100,000 people in August to 4 per 100,000 in September. That rate, however, is far eclipsed by the peak last January, when 11 Latinos died per 100,000.
For Black people, 7.4 per 100,000 people died from COVID-19 this month, up from six deaths per 100,000 in August yet down from 9.3 last January. Death rates in Asian American populations and white people also increased this month. Asian Americans currently have California’s second lowest death rate.
The culprit is most likely vaccine disparities: Latinos make up 39.4% of California’s vaccine eligible population but they’ve only received 29.5% of the doses. This means that, proportionally, not as many doses are finding their way into Latino communities as they should, health experts say. Black people also make up a higher share of the vaccine-eligible population than the doses they have received.
“The myths and the misgivings… are real for the communities who have suffered at the hands, historically, of a racist, systemic problem.” – SARAH REYES, MANAGING DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS AT THE CALIFORNIA ENDOWMENT
A reason for these disparities could be the barriers that communities of color still face to accessing vaccines, including medical misinformation and hesitancy stemming from medical mistrust, according to Sarah Reyes, managing director of communications at the nonprofit California Endowment, which focuses on improving health care access in underserved communities.
“People have to understand that the myths and the misgivings of the medical community are real,” Reyes said. “They’re real for the communities who have suffered at the hands, historically, of a racist, systemic problem.”
Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders have died at the highest rate of any racial group. But some good news: The rate decreased from 18.4 deaths per 100,000 people in January to 17 in August and 11.8 in September.
Is there a growing gender gap?
Men are dying at a slightly higher rate than they were in the beginning of the pandemic, according to the state data.
In September of last year, 45.2% of deaths were female and 54.6% were male. But in August 2021, it was 41% female and 58.9% male, which shows that the gap is widening in favor of women.
In Long Beach, 70% of deaths since July 2021 have been males, compared to 58% from March 2020 through July 2021.
Before vaccine availability, males made up a slightly larger percentage of deaths than females. Now as the gap widens, vaccinations may play a role.
“I can’t help to think that some of that is due to failure to vaccinate — differential failure to vaccinate, meaning that women are more likely to vaccinate than men,” Rutherford said.
Women are more likely to be vaccinated than men in the state, and there is still a slight gap between the proportion of men who make up the state’s vaccine population and those who still need to get vaccinated.
How do deaths in California compare to other states?
California, as of this past week, has the lowest seven-day death rate nationally — at five people dying for every million residents — and the lowest rate since January, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
However, what is happening in California is happening across the country: People 64 and under make up a larger share of deaths in 2021 than they did in 2020. National data also shows that the older you are, the more likely you are to be vaccinated.
How do counties compare?
The average age of Californians dying from COVID is skewing younger across the state.
In Fresno County, people 50 to 69 years old now make up a larger share of COVID-19 deaths than they previously did, while those 70 and older are a smaller share.
In Long Beach, which has its own health department, the average age of COVID death since August 2021 is 59 years old, 13 years younger than March 2020 through July 2021. In Long Beach, 99% of people 65 and older are vaccinated.
In Riverside County, people under 45 made up 4.1% of total deaths between Jan. and March. Between June and Aug., that number jumped to 16.1%. Among adults, people under 45 have the lowest vaccination rates.
Eleven people died in Riverside County on Sept. 20 and five of those people were under 40, said Jose Arballo, senior public information specialist at Riverside University Health System-Public Health.
Were most of the people who died unvaccinated?
Vaccinated people make up a small fraction of the deaths — approximately 500. “Far and away without any doubt, without any question, 95% of (stopping deaths) is vaccines,” Rutherford said.
Although there’s still the potential for breakthrough cases, vaccination makes it much less likely that serious illness will develop.
So if the best way to prevent deaths is the vaccine, how do health officials get younger people to get the jab? It’s complicated, but mandates — like proof of vaccination to go to restaurants or work in certain places — can help, Rutherford said. Fear can be a motivator, too.
“People are scared of the Delta variant — as they should be,” Rutherford said.
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