The threat of COVID-19 to individuals and our communities is still grave, and our children are beginning to pay the price. If you still need to get vaccinated, Congressman Peters urges you to please visit https://vaccines.gov/search/ to protect yourself and those around you.
Read more in this September 9th piece by the LATimes, posted below:
Younger unvaccinated Californians increasingly hospitalized with COVID-19
By Rong-Gong Lin II, Luke MoneyÂ
September 9th, 2021
As the Delta variant brought another wave of COVID-19 infections this summer, the age of those being hospitalized with the illness has dropped significantly in some parts of California compared to earlier surges.
Thatâs because younger people are being vaccinated at lower rates.
This age gap is causing growing concern among healthcare professionals and bringing new calls to get younger people vaccinated.
Here is a what we know:
Younger people in hospitals
Los Angeles County has reported a greater number of unvaccinated people who are younger and otherwise healthier filling hospital beds.
Among adults and the oldest teenagers who were hospitalized with COVID-19 from May 1 to Aug. 18, the median age of unvaccinated or partially vaccinated patients was 51, according to data presented at a briefing in late August. Thatâs notably younger than the median age of fully vaccinated patients in the hospital with COVID-19, which was 66.
Fully vaccinated people also were less likely to need admission into the intensive care unit or to have such difficulty breathing that they need to be sedated and have a breathing tube inserted.
At Fountain Valley Regional Hospital in Orange County, the average age of people admitted for hospital treatment in January was 64. Now itâs 46, Dr. Timothy Korber, the hospitalâs medical director of emergency services, said recently.
Dr. Rais Vohra, Fresno Countyâs interim health officer, said people are âin so much danger if youâre not vaccinated right now.â
âWe really are seeing just many, many people that are unvaccinated â young people, in their 20s, 30s and 40s â that are landing in the hospitals right now,â Vohra said. âThat could be you. That could be someone that you love, someone that you know.â
In Orange County, âthe overall pattern is that itâs the 30-, 40-, 50-year-olds who are getting hospitalized, compared to previous surges when itâs really been 65 and over,â Dr. Regina Chinsio-Kwong, a deputy health officer, said at a briefing last week.
âIf we donât take care of this pandemic and get people vaccinated soon enough, the unvaccinated will basically allow a new variant [to emerge] thatâs even more dangerous,â Vohra added.
Some success stories
Some areas and demographic groups that were hit hard earlier in the pandemic by severe disease are now reporting higher vaccination rates, in part because of successful, culturally competent public health strategies.
For example, Native Americans now have a higher vaccination rate than any other major racial or ethnic group. Imperial County, an impoverished, largely agricultural county on the Mexican border, has one of Californiaâs highest vaccination rates.
Across the state, rates of vaccinations among Black and Latino residents have generally lagged behind white and Asian Americans. But in San Francisco and Santa Clara counties, rates of vaccinations among Black and Latino residents are now essentially at least equal to those of white residents.
Vaccination numbers
California reported an increase in vaccinations when Delta hit. But that bump has since faded.
There was a 6.5% decline in weekly vaccinations in California; from Aug. 16 through Aug. 22, about 326,000 first-dose vaccinations were administered, but the following week, about 305,000 were given.
There were 75,526 first-dose administrations in L.A. County between Aug. 16 and Aug. 22, and 68,332 the following week. Health officials say that more recent data can sometimes appear artificially low, as it takes time to account for all doses given on a particular day.
Santa Clara County, Northern Californiaâs most populous, reported 9,310 first-dose vaccinations in the week before the Food and Drug Administrationâs announcement, and 8,515 first doses for the seven-day period after.
The challenges ahead
A recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey found that while 67% of surveyed U.S. adults said they were vaccinated, and 3% said theyâd get vaccinated as soon as they can, about 30% said they were unvaccinated.
Of all surveyed adults, 14% said they will definitely not get the shot, while 10% said they wanted to âwait and seeâ how the vaccines work for other people, and 3% said they would get vaccinated only if required for work or school.
âYounger adults (18-29 years old), Republicans, rural residents and the uninsured still report lower rates of vaccine uptake than other demographic groups,â the survey said.
One reason for the persistent gap, the survey found, is that unvaccinated adults âare more likely to say they are not worried they personally will get seriously sick from the coronavirus and to believe that getting the vaccine is a bigger risk to their own health than getting the virus,â while 88% of vaccinated adults say that a coronavirus infection is a bigger risk than getting the vaccine.
Most unvaccinated adults responding to the survey said they think the news media exaggerated the seriousness of COVID-19, while most vaccinated adults said the news media was either correct or underestimated the seriousness of the pandemic.