A Regional Comparison of Sonoma Countys COVID-19 Statistics - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

a regional comparison of sonoma county s covid 19
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A Regional Comparison of Sonoma Countys COVID-19 Statistics - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

A Regional Comparison of Sonoma Countys COVID-19 Statistics September 3, 2020 Dr. Sundari Mase Sonoma County Health Officer Blueprint for a Safer Economy On August 28 th , Governor Newsom introduced the Blueprint for a Safer Economy, a


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A Regional Comparison of Sonoma County’s COVID-19 Statistics

September 3, 2020

  • Dr. Sundari Mase

Sonoma County Health Officer

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Blueprint for a Safer Economy

  • On August 28th, Governor Newsom introduced the Blueprint for

a Safer Economy, a new four tier structure for reducing COVID- 19 with revised criteria for loosening and tightening restrictions on activities.

  • This framework replaces the former County Data Monitoring

criteria

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Four Tiers

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How does Sonoma County compare to the Region and State?

  • Sonoma County is one of 38

counties in the State in Tier 1 (purple): Widespread Transmission

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Measure of Spread

The R-effective refers to the average number of additional people infected by each COVID-19 case (<1 decreasing spread, >1 increasing spread)

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COVID-19 Cases by City

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Regional Comparison: Case Rate

  • New cases per 100,000 per day (7 day average; 7 day lag)

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5.9 6.5 8.6 8.6 9.1 9.8 10.8 10.8 15.6

Marin Napa San Mateo Santa Clara Solano San Francisco Contra Costa Alameda Sonoma

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Regional Comparison: Testing Positivity

  • Seven day testing positivity (7 day average; 7 day lag)

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3.0% 3.4% 3.5% 4.2% 4.3% 4.8% 6.2% 6.2% 10.6%

Marin San Francisco Santa Clara Napa Solano San Mateo Contra Costa Alameda Sonoma

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Differing Drivers of Infection

  • It is important to keep in mind that Sonoma County has a

few key differences from our Bay Area neighbors:

– Sonoma County is home to tourism, agriculture, industry. – Essential workers in Sonoma County live and work within our border. – Marin and Napa have a smaller population base and essential workers who

cannot afford to live in these counties can commute from other places.

– Contra Costa, Alameda, Marin and San Francisco do not share similar

industries, including agriculture and food production.

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Different Approaches to Testing

In addition to these differences, Sonoma County has adopted aggressive case finding strategies:

  • Sonoma County Department of Health Services has an agile, responsive

testing team that conducts active case finding at worksites, communities, facilities and vulnerable populations.

  • The network of community clinics and other major health care providers

make testing available to all persons accessing care, including family members.

  • Sonoma County has a fully staffed public health laboratory able to

prioritize testing based on shifts in the outbreak.

  • Two OptumServe sites are also available for rapid testing.

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Comparison County Considerations

  • While geographically close, our neighboring counties have

different drivers impacting their case rates.

  • To look at a more comparable example, the county of

Monterey might be considered. Like Sonoma County, Monterey County has:

– A similar population size and demographics – Substantial tourism – Strong agriculture and food production industries – Essential workers live and work within boundaries

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Comparison of Case Statistics

12 County New Cases per 100,000 per Day Testing Positivity Sonoma 15.6 10.6% Monterey 15.5 10.9% Monterey County Cases Sonoma County Cases

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Race/Ethnicity of Cases

Latinx

50% 73%

Other/Unknown

21% 31%

White, non-Hispanic

4% 16%

Asian/Pacific Islander

1% 2%

Black/African American

0% 5% 1% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%

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Monterey Sonoma

Similar to Sonoma County, Monterey County has experienced a disproportionate number of cases in the Latinx community and outbreaks among Agriculture and Farm workers

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Cases by Age Group

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25% 23% 20% 19% 19% 17% 15% 15% 15% 14% 15% 13% 12% 11% 10% 9% 9% 6% 5% 0%

0-17 18-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65+ Sonoma Monterey

Similar trends seen in cases by age groups, with the 25-34 year old age group accounting for the largest proportion of cases in both counties

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Conclusions

  • Sonoma County’s pattern of cases is similar to other

counties that share our demographic, industry and tourism profiles

  • Focused case finding efforts, extensive field testing in

vulnerable populations (e.g. skilled nursing facilities) and worksites, and systematic testing of close contacts have yielded a high number of positive cases

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What Can Sonoma County do to Slow the Spread

  • f COVID-19?
  • Continue focused approach to testing, contact tracing and data-

driven case finding

  • Reinforce importance of wearing facial coverings, social distancing,

hygiene, wearing masks when ride sharing, and avoiding gathering

  • Encourage workers to stay home when ill and urge employers to

provide sick leave when possible

  • Outreach to the agriculture industry, skilled nursing and other

congregate and vulnerable settings to strengthen prevention and mitigation measures

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