Public Health Adds 380 New COVID-19 Cases

By edhat staff

The Santa Barbara County Public Health Department (PHD) reports an additional 380 COVID-19 cases since Thursday.

PHD stated the total case count is now 3,655 as of Monday with 991 of those cases in the Lompoc Federal Prison. Of the total, there are 389 active cases with 21 in the intensive care unit (ICU) and 48 more hospitalizations. There have been 29 deaths.

The case count continues to grow in the City of Santa Maria with the number of active cases reaching 216, the most in the county.

The total numbers can be found at publichealthsbc.org.

Edhat Staff

Written by Edhat Staff

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  1. oops – have you not read anything about the long term effects this is having on even young, healthy people? Brain damage, lung damage, and much more. Take a look and let us know if you still think this is no worse than the flu. The flu doesn’t leave young people with severe and life-long lung complications.

  2. LUVADUCK. Thanks for your edifying post. I hope people will now “get it.” Here’s what The New York Times posted, relative to your comment, only two days ago, from “Our colleague Donald G. McNeil Jr., who covers science for The Times.” (Not that denier Donald guy.) —————“Evidence is also mounting, Donald said, that Covid-19 is more of a blood vessel disease than a respiratory disease. While the virus enters the body through the lungs, it seems to do its damage by attaching to the insides of blood vessels, infecting organs, like the kidneys and the brain, with lots of fine blood vessels.”

  3. It’s a good thing Santa Barbara closed things down for the forth of July weekend, and it’s a safe thing that they are keeping things closed for 3 weeks after, all but the beaches. The stores of all kinds need to do a better job of “ no mask no service. We can’t survive another shut down, can all the parents
    of these entitled people, explain, that their actions reflect on others, the younger people believe they’re invincible of this, because of the news, but what they’re not realizing, is that they can transfer it to someone else, who may sick and older, or just to someone who’s been doing all the right things, then get it from a family member who lives with them, because they needed to be irresponsible. Why is a mask, and keeping your distance so hard to do? This is crazy. Don’t eat inside restaurants, who can’t escape from any virus that will be floating around in the same inclosed room.

  4. This virus is not a question of IF you will get it (because almost everyone will get it at some time…) it’s a question of when and how severe the case will be. The measures which we have strayed away from will cause this to explode in our town in the coming weeks and months, so to think that you can just resume life as usual and open up everything is ignorant. As they say “History repeats itself” … just read about the waves of the 1918 Spanish Flu epidemic. It’s easy to justify the low mortality rate when our city hasn’t had the numbers other areas have had, but we haven’t even started getting hit by the curve – this is not a situation we can change overnight , and will not get better anytime soon.

  5. Stores won’t enforce the no mask no service rule because clerks don’t get paid to do enforcement, and it is too expensive to hire armed security guards for this. Ask the clerk from Target who got his arm broken over this. Unfortunately people can be nuts, especially the people ignoring all of the best advice from scientific experts.

  6. PITMIX in my opinion, the difference we see in SB in Ventura is due to the percentage of “blue” vs “white” collar workers – Ventura has a higher population of the “blue” or skilled workers who work in industries that do not allow for remote work – such as, mechanics, construction and the like so more interactions. Here in SB more “white” collar allowing for remote work and less interaction. I could be way off here but that’s what I think.

  7. If as some have commented, Ventura is approaching capacity will patients be sent up here? I know that was happening back east – my family would comment that you didn’t know what hospital you’d end up in if you had to go b/c of capacities/bed availability etc – some ppl were in hospitals 40 miles away from their homes. If so then I presume Cottage is accounting for that in their surge capacities?

  8. Oops said “and most of those had underlying health conditions and would have likely died from the flu” Well not if they had their flu shot and through the herd immunity of those who have had their flu shot!
    And what percent are dealing with lung, heart, and other conditions following Covid treatment across all age groups? You open everything up – it would be an apocalyptic public health disaster. Why is that hard for you to understand?

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