- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Lake County’s vaccine rollout continues; state sending staffing assistance
Tuesday’s meeting saw the board once again allowing for in-person participation by the public. At the board’s first meeting in January, it had voted to move back to virtual meetings only due to a COVID-19 case surge.
But with Lake County moving out of the purple tier – the most restrictive on the state’s Blueprint for a Safer Economy – as of last week, it triggered the board’s return to its hybrid meeting format.
Supervisor Jessica Pyska participated via Zoom while the rest of the supervisors were present in the board chambers and seated on the dais, with masks and partitions in place.
Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace told the board that the county is continuing to see dropping case rates.
“We are doing well with the vaccine rollout,” he said, explaining that 30 percent of county residents aged 16 and older have gotten at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine.
Sarah Marikos, Lake County’s epidemiologist, said the state’s test positivity rate has fallen to 1.7 percent, the lowest it’s been since the beginning of the pandemic. She said it’s dropped rapidly over the last few months but that change is beginning to slow.
Similarly, the rate of change in Lake County is slowing after having seen a rapid drop in recent months, Marikos said.
On Tuesday, Lake County remained in the red tier on the Blueprint for a Safer Economy, which Marikos said its case numbers indicated it would.
Giving further explanation to the vaccination numbers, as of March 21, Marikos said that 6,500 county residents over age 16, or 12 percent of the population, are partially vaccinated, while 18 percent, or 9,200, are fully vaccinated and 70 percent are not vaccinated.
That information from the California Immunization Registry doesn’t include the vaccinations conducted by the Lake County Tribal Health Consortium. With Tribal Health’s number included, Marikos said it brings Lake County’s vaccination coverage closer to 33 percent.
As for progress by age group, she said 62 percent of those aged 75 and older are vaccinated; age 65 to 74, 57 percent; age 55 to 64, 24 percent; age 45 to 54, 24 percent; age 35 to 44, 18 percent; and age 20 to 34, 16 percent.
By ethnicity, 69 percent of those vaccinated identify as white; Latino/Hispanic, 22 percent; Native American, 3 percent; multiracial, 3 percent; Black, 2 percent; Asian, 1 percent; Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, less than 1 percent; and other, 3 percent. Marikos said those numbers don’t include Tribal Health’s contributions to the vaccination effort.
Regarding progress for vaccinating the lowest-performing quartiles on the Healthy Places Index, a priority for the state, Marikos said 5,149 people, or 44 percent of the population in six local zip codes – Clearlake, Clearlake Oaks, Finley, Lucerne, Nice and Upper Lake – that make up the lowest-performing quartile have been partially vaccinated.
In the next-highest quartile – which includes zip codes for Cobb, Kelseyville, Lakeport, Lower Lake, Middletown and Hidden Valley Lake – Marikos said 10,219 people, or 56 percent of the population, are partially vaccinated.
Pace told the board that vaccine inventory in the county is now quite good and that they’re seeing a decrease in demand; he was not sure if that was a function of more vaccine availability.
On Monday, Lake County returned to the use of the MyTurn vaccination scheduling app, which the state had required it to do, but still had some issues. Pace said the state has indicated that the county can open up vaccinations to residents age 50 and above but the app wasn’t allowing that.
He said both Adventist Health and Sutter Health are planning to restart vaccinating again and Public Health is sharing vaccines with them.
Pace also reported that on Tuesday Public Health was expecting the arrival of 40 people the state was sending to help staff vaccination sites.
Those staffers are supposed to help the county for up to two months, and Pace said receiving the help was “a big deal.”
“We need about that many to staff the site every day,” he said, adding that Public Health had been struggling to keep the clinics going with volunteers and other county staff.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.