CONFIRMED CASES San Luis Obispo County's Latino population has a higher percentage of confirmed cases than any other ethnicity. Credit: Image Courtesy Of The California Department Of Public Health

Latino residents account for the majority of SLO County’s confirmed COVID-19 cases thus far, mirroring the virus’s disproportionate impact on Latinos across the state.

While Latinos are just 23 percent of the SLO County population, they made up 56 percent of the local COVID-19 cases to date—which was close to their percentage of statewide cases, as of press time.

CONFIRMED CASES San Luis Obispo County’s Latino population has a higher percentage of confirmed cases than any other ethnicity. Credit: Image Courtesy Of The California Department Of Public Health

SLO County spokesperson Michelle Shoresman said that the county Public Health Department recognizes the disproportionate impact COVID-19 has had on Latino residents. She said SLO Public Health is conducting specific outreach to farmworkers, providing pop-up testing, and working with Latino community-based organizations.

Their focus is to educate about ways to prevent COVID-19 and share what services are in place to support those in isolation and quarantine, including sick leave and unemployment, she said.

Shoresman also pointed to a Centers for Disease Control (CDC) July 10 report about populations that are historically affected by health disparities, including certain racial and ethnic minority populations, which are now being disproportionately impacted by and hospitalized with COVID-19.

According to the report, among the 2,729 COVID-19 patients cared for at Boston Medical Center between March and May, nearly half were Black, approximately one-third were Latino, and one in six were experiencing homelessness. Compared to Black or white patients, a higher proportion of Latino patients were hospitalized; this finding was most notable among persons 60 years and older.

Long-standing systemic health inequities and systemic racism—which influence life expectancy, underlying medical conditions, and health care access and utilization, as well as current work and living circumstances—are all factors that can play a crucial role in groups’ risk for COVID-19, according to the CDC.

SLO County does not publish race or gender data for its confirmed cases, but the information is available at the state Public Health Department. Shoresman said the county is collecting data on race and ethnicity, but it is not complete.

“Testing sites were not always asking for this information, and while we have asked for it from early on, it is often hard to get people to provide it,” she said.

County Public Health Officer Penny Borenstein has previously said that she believes the state’s statistics on the county’s confirmed COVID-19 cases are at least a day or two behind.

As of July 29, SLO County had 1,710 cases, with 12 deaths and 13 active hospitalizations. Δ

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1 Comment

  1. I appreciate Ms. Garcia raising awareness of the “disproportionate impact [of Covid-19] on Latinos” in San Luis Obispo county.

    However, I feel it is important to point out that the statistical graphs in the article did not include CASE RECOVERY. Leaving out this data breeds fear in readers who do not understand the following crucial information:

    1) “Cases” are increasing because testing is increasing

    2) “Cases” are not “deaths”

    3) The Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test being used to identify Covid-19 and assign infection status, according to the maker himself, was designed only to identify RNA and other genetic materials for replicating for scientific study, not to diagnose illness

    4) The PCR test is known to achieve 80+% false positives and false negatives, which results therefore cannot be relied upon as valid

    5) The recovery rate in the US is very close to 100% when only Covid-19 is the cause of death and all other comorbidities are left out

    Cherry-picking facts to make a point is one thing, but in today’s era of out-and-out lying and manipulation by the government and mainstream media, journalists have a vital duty to seek the truth and report the entire picture, not just the part that gets clicks or brings in the job perks.

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