California’s COVID numbers are on the rise thanks, in part, to new subvariants, suggesting an earlier-than-normal start to the summer season.
The percentage of COVID tests coming back with positive results in the state rose to 5.3% for the week that ended June 3, up from 2.2% the month before.
The numbers are still relatively low — last summer’s peak positive test rate was 13.1% — but the increases have the attention of doctors and health officials as the summer travel season begins.
“Numbers are definitely going up,” said Dr. Elizabeth Hudson, regional chief of infectious disease at Kaiser Permanente Southern California. Among Kaiser’s 4.8 million Southern California members, the increase in COVID is mostly among non-hospitalized people.
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health reported an average of 106 COVID cases for the week ending June 2. That’s up from 67 cases a day for the week that ended May 12.
“We have seen this happen over the last 4 1/2 years. We know we tend to see another wave around this time,” Hudson said. This one “started a little bit earlier, so it may crest a little earlier, and oftentimes we don’t see those hospitalized cases until a little further in.”
COVID levels also are rising in wastewater. In Los Angeles County, sewage levels were at 16% of the winter peak for the week that ended May 25, up from 8% for the week that ended May 4. In Santa Clara County — the Bay Area’s most populous county — COVID levels in wastewater are considered high from San Jose to Palo Alto. There also is a notable rise in samples in San Francisco’s sewage.
Across California, COVID in wastewater entered the high level for the week that ended June 1, the first time since February.
New subvariants are increasingly making a mark nationwide. For the two-week period that ended Friday, 55% of estimated COVID specimens in the U.S. were of the FLiRT variants — up from 28.6% a month earlier. Another upstart, LB.1, is estimated to make up 14.9% of specimens nationwide, up from 6.7% last month.
The parent of the FLiRT and LB.1 subvariants, the winter dominant strain JN.1, now accounts for an estimated 3.1% of strains nationwide. LB.1 is similar to the FLiRT subvariants — known officially as KP.1.1, KP. 2 and KP.3 — and none are very different from JN.1, said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious diseases specialist at UC San Francisco.
“They’re different enough so that they’re increasing and they’re probably exploiting vulnerabilities, and they’re very transmissible, but not so different” from JN.1 that they pose a higher risk of severe disease, Chin-Hong said.
Still, doctors remain concerned about the risk of serious illness and death among seniors and immunocompromised people — especially those who haven’t received an updated vaccine since September. More than 44,000 COVID deaths have been reported since October; by contrast, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s weekly flu surveillance report estimates 24,000 flu deaths during the same time.
One report published in March by the CDC, which looked at adults with immunocompromising conditions, found that only 18% had received an updated COVID-19 vaccine since September.
The CDC urges everyone 6 months and older to get vaccinated with the updated shot, and for those 65 and older, two shots — as long as four months have passed since their first.
But with only 36% of California’s seniors having received any COVID shots since September, doctors say it’s important the remaining population 65 and older get one shot now.
A number of racial and ethnic groups have started to see even lower vaccination rates among seniors. In California, only 31.6% of Black seniors, 29.9% of Asian American seniors and 22.8% of Latino seniors have received an updated COVID-19 vaccination.
Senior vaccination rates also vary by region — below the statewide average in much of Southern California, and highest in the San Francisco Bay Area. Los Angeles County reports 30.8% of its seniors with an updated vaccination; in San Diego County, 38.6%; Orange County, 34.2%; Riverside County, 28.1%; San Bernardino County, 26.3%; Ventura County, 37.4%; and Santa Barbara County, 40.4%.
The percentage is about 46% in Santa Clara County, more than 50% in San Francisco and nearly 60% in Marin County.
“So many people haven’t even gotten one shot. How about just even making sure that happens?” Chin-Hong said of seniors. “Everybody over 65 should probably get a shot before the new one comes out in the fall.”
If a senior got a COVID vaccination now, there would still be enough time to get this fall’s upcoming formulation around Halloween, which is a good time to get vaccinated to protect against the winter rise in COVID infections, Chin-Hong said.
“For those who are more vulnerable, I would certainly recommend getting either that first shot or that second,” Hudson said.
Chin-Hong said the patients he has seen hospitalized for COVID have not had an updated shot in the last year.
There continues to be good data demonstrating the vaccine’s effectiveness, even though the last version was designed against the XBB.1.5 subvariant, which was supplanted by JN.1 in the winter.
In a report to a U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisory committee last week, CDC epidemiologist Ruth Link-Gelles said September’s vaccine brought increased protection against symptomatic illness as well as COVID-associated hospitalizations and emergency room and urgent care visits, compared to those who didn’t get an updated shot.
But scientists also have observed weakening immunity over time — no surprise, given the same phenomenon has been seen in prior COVID vaccines. As before, the most durable protection afforded by the new vaccine guarded against critical illness, Link-Gelles said.
The latest vaccine provides protection against JN.1, although perhaps less than if someone is exposed to an XBB subvariant, Link-Gelles said.
The FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee last week voted unanimously to recommend that this autumn’s updated COVID vaccine formula be designed against JN.1 rather than FLiRT or another descendant of JN.1.
Gambling on one of the later descendants like FLiRT might make for a bad match if another descendant overtakes that one. But sticking with a shot that guards against the parent strain may ensure a better match this winter.
“COVID vaccination still really does provide really good protection against severe disease and against folks ending up in the hospital,” Hudson said. Still, “COVID is very, very new to us as a species, still, and just by nature of what coronaviruses do, they tend to mutate quickly. So it’s not something that would be unexpected to see that with time, the protection that you would get via that COVID vaccine would tend to wane a bit.”
One promising development that still is not available is getting a flu and COVID vaccine in one shot. That likely won’t happen until autumn 2025, but its unveiling could be a game-changer that could improve COVID vaccination rates. An estimated 22.5% of adults nationwide reported receiving the latest COVID vaccine, according to survey data reported to the CDC, compared to an estimated 48.5% for the flu.
“If you can get two things with one needle, I’m all for that,” Chin-Hong said.
The Moderna version of the combined flu-and-COVID shot was actually more effective than getting COVID and flu shots separately, Hudson said. Other manufacturers are expected to develop combined flu-and-COVID shots as well.
The L.A. County Department of Public Health reported a small increase in new COVID hospital admissions — an average of 19.6 a day, up from 16.9 a day about three weeks ago. Nine percent of hospitalized patients are in intensive care, but “deaths remain relatively low and stable,” with an average of one daily death, the agency said.
Previously, the mid-year COVID rise in cases and hospitalizations in L.A. County began in early July — in 2021 and 2023 — but in early May in 2022.
“With traveling and gatherings increasing during summer, protection from COVID-19 infection remains important as a new group of variants has begun to circulate nationwide,” the Public Health Department said. “Summer plans can easily be disrupted by COVID-19 illness and increased transmission continues to pose more risk for the elderly.”
Besides getting up to date on vaccinations, officials suggest common-sense steps to reduce the risk of spreading disease and getting sick: having sick people stay home and washing hands often, especially before eating and after sneezing or coughing. Testing for COVID is important to help limit spread of the illness, and can also help people know when they should ask for anti-COVID medicine such as Paxlovid, which can reduce the risk of severe illness or death among higher-risk people.
People with COVID who are contagious should stay home, and if they need to be around others, should wear a mask. Those who want to reduce the risk of getting infected can wear a mask in indoor public settings and crowded areas.