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COVID-positive hospitalizations continue to fall in LA County

County health officials also reported 14 new COVID-related deaths, raising the death toll to 35,308.

A nasal sample kit that tests for RSV, COVID-19, influenza A and B shown here at Providence St. Joseph Hospital in Orange on Tuesday, November 1, 2022 (File photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A nasal sample kit that tests for RSV, COVID-19, influenza A and B shown here at Providence St. Joseph Hospital in Orange on Tuesday, November 1, 2022 (File photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
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Los Angeles County health officials reported 1,354 new COVID-19 infections on Thursday, Jan. 2, along with 14 more virus-related deaths. But the number of people hospitalized with the virus continued to slide.

The new infections increased the county’s overall total from throughout the pandemic to 3,679,170.

The daily case numbers released by the county’s Department of Public Health are undercounts of actual virus activity, due to people who use at-home tests and don’t report the results, and others who don’t test at all.

County health officials also reported 14 new COVID-related deaths, raising the death toll to 35,308.

According to state figures, there were 707 COVID-positive patients hospitalized in the county as of Thursday, down from 747 a day earlier. Of those patients, 77 were being treated in intensive care units, down from 80 on Wednesday.

The seven-day average daily rate of people testing positive for the virus in the county was 6.4% as of Thursday, up slightly from a revised 6.1% from Wednesday.

With the county now in the “low” virus-activity level, as defined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, wearing masks indoors is now a matter of personal preference.

Masks are still required indoors at health-care and congregate-care facilities in the county, and for anyone exposed to the virus in the past 10 days, and at businesses where they are required by the owner. Masks are strongly recommended for high-risk individuals, and for people riding public transit.