California shifts gears to confront post-pandemic phase of COVID-19
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[February 18, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California Governor
Gavin Newsom presented a plan on Thursday to confront COVID-19 beyond
its pandemic phase, focusing on readiness, vigilance and vaccines as the
nation's most populous state moves from a crisis approach to "living
with this virus."
Highlights of the strategy include more stockpiling of masks and other
personal protective equipment (PPE), a "myth-busters" campaign to
counter disinformation, and greater wastewater virus surveillance to
stay ahead of new outbreaks and new variants.
The plan also calls for maintaining a capacity to administer at least
500,000 screening tests and 200,000 vaccines a day, along with a shift
in messaging urging the public to stay current on its booster shots.
Other key elements include a 25% increase in school-based inoculation
sites and a major expansion of the state's healthcare and human services
workforce.
"What we're announcing here today is about turning the page, moving ...
from a crisis mindset to living with this virus," Newsom said, speaking
at a PPE warehouse in San Bernardino, east of Los Angeles.
While the plan signals a "move out of the pandemic phase", the governor
added: "We're not walking away from this virus, because the virus
continues to change and mutate".
Newsom, saying California is the first state to formulate a
comprehensive post-pandemic strategy, also stressed the plan was
designed to pay special attention to communities of color and the
working poor, which have borne the brunt of the pandemic and remain the
most vulnerable.
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Restaurants re-open as people still wear their masks, amid the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Los Angeles, California,
U.S., February 8, 2022. REUTERS/David Swanson/File Photo
The latest approach comes nearly two
years after California, home to some 40 million people, became the
first to impose statewide stay-at-home orders and mandatory business
closures at the outset of the pandemic in March 2020.
Since then, restrictions on social and economic life throughout the
country have eased and tightened through various waves of the virus
that have killed more than 82,000 Californians and claimed well over
900,000 lives nationwide.
California joined several states earlier this month in announcing
plans to roll back mask mandates for schools and other public places
in the coming weeks as a surge in COVID-19 infections fueled by the
highly contagious Omicron variant loosened its grip.
Dr. Mark Ghaly, California's health and human services secretary,
said the change reflects declining case loads and higher levels of
immunity in a state where 75% of eligible residents are fully
vaccinated and many have contracted the virus.
The federal government is moving in the same direction. On
Wednesday, the White House COVID-19 response coordinator, Jeff
Zients, told reporters the Biden administration was shifting from a
crisis mode to a phase where "this is something we can protect
against and treat."
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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