- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Two more COVID-19-related deaths occur in Lakeport skilled nursing facility
Dr. Gary Pace said Friday that the latest deaths were the county’s 16th and 17th.
The 16th death, reported early this week, was in a person over age 65 who lived in a senior residential facility and had chronic medical issues, he said.
On Thursday, Public Health was informed of the 17th COVID-19-related death. Pace said the individual was over 60, had chronic medical issues and was living at the same senior residential facility as the person who died earlier in the week.
Both deaths reported this week were connected to Lake County’s second outbreak at a residential facility, Pace said.
Pace noted that the outbreak has now “started to stabilize.”
He did not name the facility. However, the first local outbreak was at Lakeport Post Acute, the second was at Rocky Point Care Center, also in Lakeport, according to the California Department of Public Health’s COVID-19 dashboard.
Lakeport Post Acute has had 37 residents and 22 health care workers test positive for COVID-19, while Rocky Point has had 49 confirmed cases in residents and 17 in its health care staff, the state reported.
The state’s dashboard did not give the specific numbers of deaths at each facility, only saying each had less than 11.
The California Department of Public Health said that there have been 27,411 residents who have tested positive for COVID-19 in the 1,223 skilled nursing facilities across the state, with 21,006 health care workers also contracting the virus. Altogether, 4,705 residents and 153 health care workers associated with those facilities have died, the state said.
“Each time we receive a report of a COVID-connected death in Lake County, it is a stark and painful reminder of just how destructive this virus can be, not only to the individuals that pass away but to all of those connected to them,” said Pace.
Overall, Lake County has had well over 700 confirmed cases, although the case numbers posted by the county on Friday were not current due to technical issues.
Statewide, as of Friday night, there had been more than 928,800 confirmed cases and 17,632 deaths, according to reports posted online by the Public Health departments of California’s 58 counties.
“COVID-19 is prevalent in our communities,” said Pace. “Think about the people you know. If you are closely associated with someone working in a job that requires a lot of public contact, or direct interaction with vulnerable individuals, for example, please be vigilant in taking precautions at all times. Simple precautions can be life-saving.”
Dr. Pace is scheduled to give the Board of Supervisors an update on the local situation with the virus at 9:35 a.m. Tuesday.
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