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Los Angeles County has reported an uptick in COVID-19 deaths, with daily fatalities resulting from the virus doubling in just one week. 

On Thursday, the county reported 102 COVID-19 deaths, marking the most fatalities it has seen in a day since March 10, 2021, according to the county’s public health department

The department said most of those fatalities are likely the result of the highly transmissible omicron variant, which was first detected in South Africa last November and has since spread around the world. 

Ninety percent of those fatal infections came after Dec. 24, a timeline suggesting that the omicron variant was the cause of the spike in those cases, the department reported.

The county’s Director of Public Health Barbara Ferrer also noted that Black and Latinx residents had higher rates of cases, hospitalization and deaths, marking “a tragedy that reflects both long standing inequities to the resources that promote good health and policies and practices that marginalize the concerns of people of color.” 

Early studies have indicated that the omicron variant tends to be more mild than other COVID-19 strains and less likely to cause hospitalizations.

But for the people for whom the variant does become deadly, their condition tends to worsen more quickly than those infected with previous variants, Ferrer said, according to The Los Angeles Times.

“It means that for the people who are, in fact, ending up passing away from COVID, if they were infected with omicron, it looks like they get hit pretty hard earlier on,” Ferrer explained.

On Monday, Los Angeles County’s public health department reported 25,784 daily cases and 27 deaths resulting from the virus.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric GarcettiEric GarcettiBass raises nearly million since launching LA mayor campaign Los Angeles mayor nominates city’s first female fire chief Former aide says she felt ‘abandoned’ by Democrats who advanced Garcetti nomination as ambassador to India MORE (D) stressed the devastation of the death toll, but said he believes that “we’re in a better place” compared to last winter, The Times reported. 

“We’re still walking through … the shadow of the valley of death right now when we see 100-plus people in my city, my county, die in a single day like we did last week,” the mayor said. “And somehow that’s become normalized, or we don’t think about it as hard as we used to. I do. I still think about it. I pray on it each night. I pray on it in the morning when I wake up.”



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Post Source Thehill