California became the first state in the US to record more than 5 million COVID-19 cases. In a state with 40 million residents bracing for an increase in new infections as holiday parties and family gatherings will be indoors due to a series of winter storms.
On January 25, 2020, there was first coronavirus case confirmation in California. It took 292 days to reach 1 million infections on November 11, that year, and 44 days to reach 2 million. California’s caseload also outnumbers that of other large states. As of Sunday, Texas had more than 4.4 million residents, while Florida had more than 3.9 million. More than 75,500 people have died as a result of COVID-19 in California. The state has fared far better than many other states dealing with a coronavirus outbreak, with the Midwest and Northeast seeing the greatest increase in cases and hospitalizations due to frigid temperatures that have kept people indoors.
The average cost of an intensive care COVID-19 hospitalisation is $127,000
California, like almost everywhere else in the country, is listed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as having “high” virus transmission. Meanwhile, coronavirus-related hospitalizations in California have been steadily heightening, intensifying by about 12% in the last seven days to 4,401. This is less than half of what it was during the late summer peak. And one-fifth of what it was a year ago before vaccines were widely available. Because of the increasing caseload, San Francisco announced on Tuesday that it would cancel its New Year’s Eve fireworks display.
Contra Costa County in the Bay Area declared that masks would be required to be worn in all public indoor places beginning Wednesday. Formerly, some with vaccination had to unload them. The timeline of COVID-19 in America repeatedly retreats to California. It had some of the initial known cases among Chinese travellers, where the outbreak began. The death of a San Jose woman on February 6, 2020 was the first known coronavirus casualty in the United States. That same month, California documented the first non-travel-related case in the United States. As well as the first infection spread within the population.
Scientists speculate that omicron circulates sooner than other coronavirus strains, including delta. And that it will become dominant in the United States by early next year. According to Covered California, the average cost of an intensive care coronavirus hospitalisation is $127,000. But the organization calculates that 85 percent of those eligible for state-brokered health insurance can obtain coverage for free with government assistance.