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Weekly reported COVID-19 infections increase by 40% in San Diego County

A Sweetwater High School staff member distributes a COVID-19 testing kit to a parent in the Sweetwater High School parking lot on January 7, 2022.
Roland Lizarondo
A Sweetwater High School staff member distributes a COVID-19 testing kit to a parent in the Sweetwater High School parking lot on January 7, 2022.

The San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency reported 1,579 new COVID-19 infections Thursday, the most since early February and part of a larger trend as infections continue to increase.

A total of 7,008 cases were reported during the past week, compared with 4,996 cases identified the previous week — a 40% increase. These are only the cases reported to county or hospital sites. As the proliferation of at-home tests has increased, the actual number of infections is likely a considerably higher number.

In addition, the HHSA reported five deaths Thursday, increasing the county's cumulative totals to 775,369 infections and 5,282 deaths.

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Pending approval from the Western States committee, booster doses of COVID-19 vaccine may soon be available for San Diego children ages 5 through 11, the HHSA announced on Thursday.

The COVID-19 Pfizer boosters should be given five months after receiving the final dose of the primary vaccine series.

"Some parents have been anxiously waiting to give their children extra protection against COVID-19 and the shots may be finally approved," said Dr. Wilma J. Wooten, San Diego County Public Health Officer. "COVID-19 boosters for everyone who is eligible are easy to get because we have plenty of vaccine available in the region."

Additionally, the Omicron variants have been making more San Diego children sick, the HHSA reported, with some requiring hospitalization and others developing multisystem inflammatory syndrome or MIS-C. From Nov. 27, 2021, to May 7, 2022, 90% of the pediatric hospitalizations for the syndrome occurred in not-fully-vaccinated children.

Since the pandemic began, there have been 98 MIS-C cases in the county. Of those, 53% have been reported in children ages five to 11 and 60%- have been Hispanic.

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According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "MIS-C is a rare, but serious, postinfectious hyperinflammatory condition occurring about 2 to 6 weeks after infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus."

Symptoms of MIS-C include fever, abdominal pain, diarrhea, skin rash, inflammation and multiorgan dysfunction. In severe cases, children can experience hypotension (low blood pressure) and shock. Approximately 60-80% of the early cases of MIS-C patients required intensive care admission.

"MIS-C can often be so severe that children require life-saving interventions," Wooten said. "Parents should contact their doctor immediately if their child develops any of these symptoms. The best thing parents can do is get all the recommended doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for themselves and their children."

More than 2.96 million or 94% of San Diegans age 5 and older are at least partially vaccinated, while more than 2.62 million or 83.3% are fully vaccinated. A total of 1,323,824 or 58.5% of 2,264,730 eligible San Diegans have received a booster shot.

A total of 9,611 tests were reported to the county on May 14, and the percentage of new positive cases was 7.3%. The 14-day rolling percentage of positive cases, among tests reported through May 14, is 5.8%.

The number of people hospitalized with a coronavirus infection in San Diego County increased by 14 to 134, once again surpassing Santa Clara County for the second-highest hospitalization numbers in the state, according to the latest state data.

Of those patients hospitalized as of Thursday, 24 were being treated in intensive care, two more than. The number of available hospital beds was 219.

The county only reports COVID-19 data on Mondays and Thursdays.

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