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Another new coronavirus variant found across California, including L.A. County

At Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, a COVID-19 patient is placed on her stomach to assist with breathing
At Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, Registered Nurse Susha Abraham assists a COVID-19 patient who is positioned on her stomach to assist with breathing after her oxygen level dropped below 90.
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)
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As the total number of coronavirus infections in California approaches 3 million, health officials said Sunday that a new strain — different from a highly contagious variant first identified in the United Kingdom — is popping up more frequently across the state.

Researchers have identified the strain in a dozen counties and have linked it to several large outbreaks in Santa Clara County. The California Department of Public Health said it’s not yet clear whether the variant is highly contagious or is just being identified frequently as lab work becomes more sophisticated.

Santa Clara County laboratories studying changes in the virus’ genome sequence found the strain in samples from community testing sites and from outbreaks where “very high numbers of people exposed contracted the virus,” officials said.

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“This virus continues to mutate and adapt, and we cannot let down our guard,” said Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County health officer and director of the Public Health Department, in a prepared statement.

The new variant has also been reported in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Francisco, San Bernardino, San Diego, Humboldt, Lake, Mono, Monterey and San Luis Obispo counties.

Scientists say they don’t know how prevalent the strain is, because viral genomic sequencing isn’t performed everywhere across the state or the country.

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The latest maps and charts on the spread of COVID-19 in California.

The variant carries three mutations in the spike protein, which the virus uses to attach to and enter cells, said Dr. Charles Chiu, a virologist at UC San Francisco.

The two COVID-19 vaccines on the market in the U.S., produced by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, train the body’s immune system to target the spike protein. This means that, in theory, the virus mutations could alter the spike protein to a degree that the vaccines become less effective.

Chiu said researchers are prioritizing the study of the variant and are working to determine whether the virus is “more infectious or affects vaccine performance.”

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The variant is not the same as the highly contagious strain first identified last month in the United Kingdom. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Friday that the U.K. variant, known as B117, could become the dominant coronavirus strain in the U.S. by March because it spreads so quickly.

Los Angeles County on Saturday confirmed its first case of the B117 variant in a man who had spent time in the county but is now in isolation in Oregon.

Meanwhile, late Sunday, Dr. Erica S. Pan, state epidemiologist for the Department of Public Health, sent an alert to California medical providers recommending that they temporarily stop administering Moderna COVID-19 vaccine doses from a single lot after “fewer than 10” people had allergic reactions to the shot at a community vaccination clinic, Pan said.

More than 330,000 doses from the lot were distributed to 287 providers in California from Jan. 5 to Jan. 12, officials said. Providers should use other available vaccine doses “out of an extreme abundance of caution,” Pan said, until Moderna and state and federal health officials finish their investigation.

On Sunday, the total number of California residents to have received a positive coronavirus test reached 2.96 million.

In rural Northern California, small public health departments battle COVID-19 in a region where skepticism of the virus runs deep.

In L.A. County, officials reported 108 deaths and 11,366 new positive cases Sunday, bringing the total to 13,848 deaths and slightly more than 1 million cases. Officials cautioned that the data reported Sunday may be artificially low due to a delay in reporting over the holiday weekend.

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So many people have died in Los Angeles County that officials have temporarily suspended air-quality regulations that limit the number of cremations. Health officials and the L.A. County coroner requested the change because the current death rate is “more than double that of pre-pandemic years, leading to hospitals, funeral homes and crematoriums exceeding capacity, without the ability to process the backlog,” the South Coast Air Quality Management District said Sunday.

In at least one glimmer of hope, the number of people in L.A. County hospitalized with COVID-19 fell this week, from 7,910 on Monday to 7,498 on Sunday, down from a peak of slightly over 8,000, health officials said. About 23% of hospitalized patients are in intensive care.

The share of people who took a coronavirus test and received a positive result has also fallen slightly, from 16.5% on Monday to 14%. Officials say that dip could be a sign that infections are starting to fall after a post-holiday surge.

Meanwhile, in Orange County, health officials reported 1,448 new cases and 47 deaths. The county’s totals now stand at 210,813 cases and 2,367 deaths.

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