Advertisement

L.A. County records fifth Omicron variant case, possibly the result of community spread

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 3, 2021 - Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of L.A. County Department of Health, visits a free COVID-19 Rapid Test site at the Tom Bradley International Terminal at Los Angeles International Airport Friday, December 3, 2021. This was the first day free tests were made available to arrivals and Dr. Ferrer personally tried to direct many travelers to take a free test. In partnership with the state and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the county set up a free rapid testing site for arriving passengers. They were also gave those testing negative a kit they can use to test themselves again three to five days later, in line with CDC recommendations for international travelers coming to the U.S., regardless of vaccination status. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer visits a free coronavirus test site at the Tom Bradley International Terminal at LAX last week. The county's first four Omicron variant cases are thought to be travel-related. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Public health officials announced Los Angeles County's fifth confirmed case of the coronavirus' Omicron variant Wednesday.

Unlike previous cases, officials believe this case may have been transmitted locally, according to the L.A. County Department of Public Health.

The patient in the most recent case was fully vaccinated and had received a booster shot, county health officials said. The patient had mild symptoms, and multiple close contacts have since tested positive and are self-isolating.

The Department of Public Health is working to determine whether the additional cases in those close contacts are of the Omicron variant, officials said. Several of the patients are fully vaccinated, and authorities are determining the vaccination statuses of the rest.

"The identification of a case of Omicron attributed to community spread is a reminder that we all need to take necessary precautions to prevent transmission of COVID-19," said Barbara Ferrer, the county's public health director. "Celebrating with those we love this holiday season requires layering on the protections that are now available to us: vaccinations, boosters, masking up, and testing. This is how we slow the spread of Delta and Omicron."

So far, the L.A. County Department of Public Health has tallied four cases. Long Beach, which has its own health department, reported an Omicron case Tuesday in a fully vaccinated resident who was experiencing no symptoms and who had traveled abroad, although not to southern Africa.

The largest proportion of confirmed Omicron cases has been among people in southern Africa.

L.A. County reported its second and third Omicron cases on Monday: a USC student who had recently returned from the East Coast and someone who traveled from western Africa.

Officials are reminding the public that getting vaccinated or boosted is critical as holiday travel and gatherings commence.

Confirmed Omicron variant cases continued to climb across California, with the new L.A. County case bringing the statewide tally to 12.

As of Wednesday night, there were six cases in Alameda County, five in L.A. County and one in San Francisco.

California Department of Public Health officials said Wednesday night that they'd confirmed a sixth Omicron case in Alameda County.

The confirmation follows last week's discovery of five cases in the county, in what officials called an outbreak involving people who'd flown to a wedding in Wisconsin in late November.

The sixth case occurred in an Alameda County resident who also attended the wedding in Wisconsin.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.