Rising COVID clashes with carefree California summer as cases jump, precautions fade

A man plays tennis against a wall Tuesday in Venice Beach, Calif.. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

COVID is continuing to rise this summer, and its spread is being aided by people who are still going to work or traveling while sick.

“Certainly, people are trying to get back to whatever life was like before the pandemic,” said Dr. Elizabeth Hudson, regional chief of infectious disease at Kaiser Permanente Southern California. “We’re in a different place than we were before. … However, good common sense shouldn’t go out the window.”

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While COVID is less severe for most people than during the first years of the pandemic — thanks to immunizations and past infections — and guidance about how to stay safe has become less stringent, doctors say it’s still important for people who are sick to avoid putting others at risk.

A new team of subvariants, called FLiRT, is estimated to be 20% more transmissible than last winter’s dominant variant, JN.1. And they’re increasingly dominating the nation; for the two-week period that ended July 6, an estimated 70.5% of COVID specimens nationwide were of the FLiRT subvariants — officially known as KP.3, KP.2 and KP.1.1 — up from 54.9% a month earlier.

It’s clear Americans’ COVID worries have eased.

A March Gallup poll found Americans are less worried about getting COVID, with 20% of U.S. adult respondents saying they were “very or somewhat worried that they will contract COVID-19.” That’s similar to all-time lows in mid-2021 — amid initial excitement that the pandemic was fading after vaccines were introduced, but before the Delta variant emerged — and mid-2023, and significantly below the 55% to 59% of respondents who feared falling victim to the disease in 2020.

A recent Pew survey found similar attitudes, with only 20% of Americans saying they view COVID as a major health threat, and 10% of respondents saying they were “concerned they will get it and require hospitalization.”

And while COVID vaccination rates were relatively robust in the early years of the pandemic, the appetite for booster shots has waned. As of September 2022, 80% of Californians 12 and older had completed their primary COVID vaccination series. Now, 36.7% of the state’s seniors age 65 and up have received an updated shot since the last version was made available in September, as have 18.5% of those 50-64 and 10% of the youngest adults, up to age 49.

How to stay safe right now

The most important guidance is the most common-sense: Stay home and away from others if you’re sick. Symptoms of a respiratory virus can include fever, aches, sore throat, chills, fatigue, cough, runny nose and headache.

Vomiting, diarrhea and stomachache are less common but very real symptoms of COVID-19. COVID as a disease is “like an inflammatory bomb,” Hudson said, “and our [gastrointestinal] system is obviously going to be impacted by anything that’s causing a lot of inflammation — and that shows up as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea.”

People can resume normal activities 24 hours after their symptoms have improved and they’ve been fever-free without using medicine such as Tylenol or Advil, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But the agency also advises added precautions for five additional days to avoid infecting others, such as wearing a mask, opening windows to improve air circulation, washing hands often, keeping one’s distance from others and continuing to test. People may want to be especially cautious about infecting others during this time if they continue to test positive even after they feel better.

“You should continue to wear a mask … and if you’re going to meet people, try to meet them outdoors” during that span, Hudson said. The respirators that offer the most protection are called N95, followed by KN95 and KF94 models. Surgical face masks — often colored blue — provide more protection than cloth masks. The best mask is comfortable enough to wear consistently, health officials say, while also fitting well against the face and having a high-quality filter.

“If you are not feeling well, you should really stay home,” she added. “And if you’re not feeling well, you should really be testing yourself for COVID.”

The CDC says if you never had symptoms but tested positive, you don’t need to isolate — but you may still be contagious and should take added precautions, like wearing a mask around other people, for at least five days.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health suggests infected people who have symptoms get a negative test result before leaving isolation. The agency also suggests people who are infected — whether or not they have symptoms — wear a mask around others for 10 days after they start feeling sick or, if asymptomatic, their first positive test result. However, they can remove their mask sooner if they have two sequential negative tests at least one day apart.

L.A. County also suggests those who are infected avoid contact with high-risk people — such as the elderly and immunocompromised — for 10 days after the onset of symptoms or their first positive test result.

If patients recover and then get sick again, they may have COVID rebound and need to stay home.

The guidelines to stay home when sick may seem obvious, but in practice, many people have a hard time following them.

But one sick person spreading COVID can have a cascade of consequences — and lead to hard feelings that last years. And some people can still become quite sick, even if they’re infected by someone experiencing mild symptoms, if any.

Those who are older and immunocompromised and aren’t up-to-date on vaccinations are at highest risk of dying from COVID-19. Hundreds of people nationwide continue to die from COVID-19 every week.

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