- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Newly released demographic information sheds light on Lake County’s COVID-19 cases
Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace said he would release the information once the county passed the 50-case mark, which it did over the weekend.
The information is to be updated weekly on the Lake County Coronavirus Response Hub.
The new data shows that the highest number of cases have been reported in supervisorial District 2, which includes Clearlake; there, 19 of the county’s 56 cases are located.
District 3, which covers the Northshore, has 13 cases; District 4, covering the Lakeport and north Lakeport areas, has 12; District 5, which includes areas from Kelseyville to Cobb, has seven; and District 1 – which covers a portion of Clearlake, as well as Middletown, Hidden Valley and Lower Lake – has five cases.
Public Health has traced 25 of the 56 cases to close contacts to known cases. Fifteen cases have been tracked to out-of-county contacts with known cases and travel.
The origin of six cases are under investigation, four cases are presumed to have come from occupational contact, four cases are attributed to “other/unknown” sources and two are related to a congregate living situation like a jail or nursing home. The sheriff’s office previously had confirmed two inmates at the Lake County Jail tested positive.
In assessing the age range of patients, the largest number of COVID-19 positive individuals, 36, was in the 18 to 49 age range, followed by 12 patients in the 50 to 64 category, five among those age 65 and above, and three in the range of birth to age 17.
As for gender, local cases are following the statewide trend of more cases being confirmed in males. Of Lake County’s cases so far, 32 are in men and 24 are in women.
In releasing the demographics on Monday Public Health left out a key piece of information – a case breakdown by racial and ethnic data.
That’s information that numerous other counties as well as the state have released on a regular basis for months.
The California Department of Public Health has reported finding consistent and stark health disparities with how COVID-19 affects people of color. When it comes to COVID-19 deaths, the agency said that for adults 18 and older, Californians who identify as Latino, Black, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander are dying at disproportionately higher levels.
Pace did not respond to questions from Lake County News about why this ethnic and racial data was not reported.
He also did not respond to a request for how many health care workers in Lake County have been impacted by COVID-19. CDPH said local health departments have reported 14,827 confirmed positive cases in health care workers and 88 deaths statewide.
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